BEHIND THE CRAFT
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Captain Kidd - Protector to Pirate

An extract:

“Pirates were rife in the Indian Ocean, and Moghul shipowners plying the route from India to Arabia, having accepted the Company as natural heirs to the Portuguese, expected the same level of protection that their predecessors had provided.

The Company had neither the resources nor the inclination to provide this protection, and piracy became a serious problem, especially in the later years of the seventeenth century.

All pirates must defer to the infamous Captain Kidd who, in defiance of the cliché as well as the Company’s wishes, was a gamekeeper-turned-poacher.

Hired by the Directors ... to help suppress piracy, William Kidd soon discovered the most profitable side of the fence, and became the scourge of the Arabian Sea … until he was caught and executed in 1701."

FGBK10105

The East India Company - Trade and Conquest from 1600

ISBN: 978-0-9561221-4-8

Beautifully illustrated, the story over 3 centuries of the building of an unparalleled trading empire and its ultimate downfall. A highly entertaining and illuminating read.

The East India Company - Lifestyle

Accessories

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£29.99
• The race to and from the Spice Islands

• The meeting of East and West in Japan

• The British arrival and rule in India

• Creation of the global tea industry

• The invention of the Gin & Tonic

• Chinese porcelein and wallpaper to Europe

• Chintzes, ginghams and muslins - fabrics from east to west

• The Boston Tea Party and American Independence

• And much more…
Trade and Conquest
• Author: Anthony Wild

• First Published in 1994 by HarperCollins

• ISBN: 978-0-9561221-1-7

• Dimensions: 24.13 x 1.91 x 27.94 cm

• Language: English

• Hardcover

• Pages: 192

Stories

First Opium War and Legacy

Used since ancient times for illness and ailments, today opium provides important pain relief drugs such as morphine, but also the illegal, destructive heroin.

Because of its medicinal value it’s no surprise that the English tried to cultivate opium. The East India Company took that cultivation to India, conditions enabling a higher quality than that available from Turkey and Iran, the primary sources.

In the 18th Century the Chinese started to use it recreationally, smoking it with tobacco, causing widespread addiction, leading the Chinese Emperor to issue edicts banning the sale of Opium, the first in 1729. The Company issued orders to its own ships’ commanders not to carry it to China, but the edict was largely ignored in China, millions became addicted, with private traders and smugglers profiting.

The Company’s opium business in India consequently grew rapidly with the Company able to distance itself from direct involvement and stick its moral head in the sand. It was motivated by needing silver to buy tea from the Chinese who had a net trade surplus with Europe from porcelain, silks and tea.
By the 1830s, the Company was shipping vast amounts of Opium into the free trade region of Canton and then selling to Chinese smugglers. The Emperor petitioned the Company and directly to the Queen Victoria, but to no avail.

Further edicts were issued banning opium completely in 1837, with capital punishment for those involved. Opium was seized and destroyed, which was too much for the Company, who advised London that force was needed in response. Ultimately it was the British Government that sent a naval force and defeated the Chinese. The resulting Treaty of Nanking of 1842, forced China to cede Hong Kong to the British and establish a series of ‘treaty ports’ including Shanghai, alongside huge financial compensation.

In some ways, the Opium story is a microcosm of The East India Company story as whole over over its 250 years. What started as an honest intent to trade in a legitimate market was overtaken by an obviously more powerful motivator of greed. The complicity in aiding the opium addiction of millions of Chinese and the legacy of opium production in the old colonies is a painful one for Britain as a nation.

The reborn East India Company of the 21st century has no such connections to the imperial past. It exists to inspire a new generation with only those best intentions of those original curious, intrepid pioneers.

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