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Danish and other European settlements in India.

The Danish East India Company[1] (Danish: Dansk Østindisk Kompagni) was a Danish chartered company.

History

Christian IV of Denmark and Norway.

It was founded in 1616, following a privilege of Danish King Christian IV. It was focused on trade with India and had its base in Trankebar, in the fort Dansborg, the seat of its governor (see indirect rule) of Danish India, who was styled Opperhoved. During its heyday, the Danish East India Company and Swedish East India Company imported more tea than the British East India Company and smuggled 90 percent of it into Britain, where it could be sold at a huge profit.

After a short blossoming, it lost importance quickly and was dissolved in 1729. In 1730, it was refounded as the Asiatisk Kompagni ("Asiatic Company") and with the royal license conferred in 1732, the new company was granted a 40-year monopoly on all Danish trade east of the Cape of Good Hope, yet in 1772, it lost its monopoly, and in 1779 Danish India became a crown colony.

During the Napoleonic Wars, in 1801 and again in 1807, the British Navy attacked Copenhagen in the Battle of Copenhagen (1807). As a consequence of the last attack, Denmark (one of few West European countries not occupied by Bonaparte) lost its entire fleet and the island of Helgoland (part of the duchy of Holstein-Gottorp; ceded to Germany in 1890) to Britain. Denmark finally sold its remaining settlements in mainland India in 1845 and the Danish Gold Coast to the British in 1850.

See also

Notes

Sources and references

Danish overseas colonies and territories
Former colonies
Danish Gold Coast (Ghana)

Danish India
Tranquebar (Tharangambadi) · Balasore · Frederiksnagore (Serampore) · Danmarksnagore (Gondalpara) · Calicut (Kozhikode) · Oddeway Torre (Malabar Coast) · Frederiksøerne (Nicobar Islands)

Danish West Indies (U.S. Virgin Islands)

Denmark
Current overseas
territories
Faroe Islands · Greenland

See also Danish East India Company · Danish West India Company
Chartered companies
British
Company of Merchant Adventurers of London · Company of Merchant Adventurers · London and Bristol Company · African Company of Merchants · Muscovy Company · Spanish Company · Eastland Company · Morocco Company · East India Company · Levant Company · Virginia Company · French Company · Massachusetts Bay Company · Providence Island Company · Royal West Indian Company · Hudson's Bay Company · Royal African Company · Greenland Company · South Sea Company · Sierra Leone Company · North Borneo Company · Royal Niger Company · South Africa Company

French
Company of One Hundred Associates · Compagnie de l'Occident · Compagnie du Mississippi · Compagnie des Îles de l'Amérique · Compagnie des Indes Occidentales · Compagnie des Indes Orientales

German
Brandenburg African Company · Emden Company · West African Company · New Guinea Company · East Africa Company

Portuguese
Companhia da Guiné · Companhia de Moçambique · Companhia do Niassa

Low Countries
Dutch East India Company · Nordic Company · New Netherland Company · Dutch West India Company · Ostend Company

Scandinavian
Danish East India Company · Danish West India Company · Royal Greenland · New Sweden Company · Swedish Africa Company · Swedish East India Company · Swedish West India Company · Swedish Levant Company

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