Indian Colonization

  • 1498

    The first direct sea trade route from Europe to Asia

    The first direct sea trade route from Europe to Asia was established in 1498 when Vasco da gama of Portugal reached the port of Calicut on the southwestern coast of India.
  • Queen Anne 1 granted a royal charter to some London merchants

    Queen Anne 1 granted a royal charter to some London merchants
  • Period: to

    The decline of the region

    The decline of the region started about 150 years before their peak in 1750.
  • the British East India Company established its first factory post

    the British East India Company established its first factory post in Masulipatnam on the Andhra Coast of the Bay of Bengal.
  • the company receiving freedom to act

    The EIC was on a mission to expand faster and more efficiently, which led to the company receiving freedom to act as a free entity in 1670.
  • The Area We Call India Today

    India's peak
  • the EIC to wage war

    It also allowed the EIC to wage war on the states in the Indian region including Siraj ud-Daulah, the Nawab (governor) of Bengal during the Battle of Plassey in 1757.
  • the EIC fought the Mughal emperor

    9 years later, the EIC fought the Mughal emperor and the Nawab of Oudh to gain control of Bihar and Oudh.
  • The Sepoy mutiny of 1857

    The Sepoy mutiny of 1857 led to the direct control of the territories previously captured by the EIC by the British crown.
  • the Government of India Act

    In 1858, the Government of India Act transferred full governing authority from the EIC to the British government.
  • Queen Victoria

    18 years later in 1876, Queen Victoria of the British Empire was named empress of India.
  • Period: to

    the British rulers

    Over the next 71 years, the British rulers were being challenged left and right by their ruled peoples.
  • Salt March

    One such challenge was the Salt March in 1930 which was a nonviolent show of civil disobedience led by Gandhi. They were protesting the British monopoly on salt.