East India Company (1600–1858)
commerce pace layer · 1600–1858
lifespan: 258 yrs · motor: pull
Standalone card for the British East India Company: the canonical load-bearing instance of the Mercantile JSC class (machine:joint-stock-company-mercantile-1602), promoted to its own card because it satisfies ≥2 of the promotion criteria (distinct wallerstein trajectory from class; own ≥3-phase snapshot arc; referenced as target by ≥2 couplings on other atlas cards including british-empire-state-machine-1815). Chartered December 31 1600 by Elizabeth I (15-year monopoly on Asian trade). Operational grammar across three phases: (1) MM-Dawn 1600–1757: chartered monopoly over Indian Ocean and Southeast Asian trade; Surat factory 1612; Bombay acquired 1668 as Catherine of Braganza dowry; armed merchantmen + factor-and-supercargo networks extract spice, cloth, and silver rents; (2) MM-Day-early 1757–1813: Battle of Plassey 1757 → de facto Bengal sovereignty; Regulating Act 1773 + India Act 1784 introduce parliamentary oversight; Cornwallis Permanent Settlement 1793 locks in cadastral template for Bengal; company transitions from trade corporation to quasi-sovereign territorial-administrative apparatus; fiat_progress_credibility peaks; (3) MM-Day-late 1813–1858: Charter Act 1813 strips Indian-trade monopoly; 1833 strips China-trade monopoly; EIC becomes purely administrative agent; Opium Wars 1839–1842 (Hong Kong cession); Indian Mutiny / Sepoy Rebellion 1857 → Government of India Act 1858 dissolves EIC; governance transfers to Crown (Raj begins November 1 1858). The EIC's outputs are load-bearing: the Bengal opium–China trade finances British imperial expansion; the colonial land-survey and administrative template becomes the institutional DNA of British India; the sepoy army model prefigures Crown military logistics. In 2026 the EIC is historical (dissolved 1858) but its institutional byproducts are load-bearing forward couplings into DM platforms and post-colonial administrative forms. [STUB-targets] used for Indian Colonial Railway, Qing modernization, Foxconn, Mercantilist Trade Policy pending Batch 2 card authoring.
Machine type
corporeal
Plasticity
rigid
Substrate
Wave source
wave9-atlas-mm-cluster-a
Inputs
- Royal charter — monopoly grant (Elizabeth I 1600)
- Shareholder capital (transferable-share subscriptions)
- Iberian and Spanish-American silver (monetary capital for Asian trade)
- Sepoy army (Bengal, Bombay, Madras Presidencies)
Outputs
- Bengal opium–China trade (opium chests exported to Qing Empire)
- British India legal-administrative template (Permanent Settlement; civil codes; cadastral surveys)
- Military-logistics infrastructure (forts, garrisons, armed merchantmen, roads)
- Commodity flows (spice, cloth, indigo, cotton goods)
Landscape pressures
- Industrial energy-regime transition undermining factor-network trade advantage (75% intensity)
- Indian nationalist and sepoy mobilization (Mutiny 1857) (85% intensity)
- Parliamentary pressure stripping trade monopolies (1813, 1833) (80% intensity)
Intra-era couplings
- owned_by British Empire State Machine (1815–1914) · 0.90 CANON
- precedes Indian Colonial Railway State (1853–1947) · 0.82 CANON
- extracts_from Qing/Republican Modernization (1861–1949) · 0.78 CANON
- instrument_of Mercantilist Trade Policy (state-strategic trade regulation, 1500–1800) · 0.80 CANON
- instance_of Joint-Stock Company (Mercantile form, 1602) · 0.95 CANON
Cross-era couplings
- substrate_provision Foxconn Global Assembly Platform (1988) · 0.45 EXTRAP
- adapted_inheritance Joint-Stock Company (Platform form, 1980) · 0.68
State variables
Phase snapshots
Notable instances
- Surat Factory (1612 — first permanent EIC base in India) (1612) — First permanent EIC factory on the Indian subcontinent; Surat was the gateway to Mughal-period textile trade. Bombay sup…
- Bombay Presidency (1668 — Catherine of Braganza dowry transfer) (1668) — Bombay transferred to Charles II of England as part of Catherine of Braganza's Portuguese dowry; leased to EIC 1668 for …
- Madras Presidency — Fort St George (1640) (1640) — First EIC fortified trading post on the Coromandel Coast; Fort St George 1640 is the founding instance of EIC coercive-t…
- Bengal Presidency post-Plassey (1757–1858) (1757) — Post-Battle of Plassey (June 23 1757), de facto Bengal sovereignty. Robert Clive era. The canonical instance of EIC as q…
- Hong Kong (post-Treaty of Nanking 1842) (1842) — Ceded to Britain via Treaty of Nanking 1842 following First Opium War; EIC administered in its final phase. Became Crown…
Sources
- Robins, Nick (2006). The Corporation That Changed the World · 90%
- Bowen, H.V. (2006). The Business of Empire: The East India Company and Imperial Britain 1756-1833 · 88%
- Stern, Philip J. (2011). The Company-State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India · 88%
- Bayly, C.A. (1988). Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire · 85%
- Marshall, P.J. (1976). East Indian Fortunes: The British in Bengal in the Eighteenth Century · 85%
- Roy, Tirthankar (2012). The East India Company: The World's Most Powerful Trading Corporation · 85%