The
East India Company, which was incorporated on 31 December 1600, established trade relations with Indian rulers in
Masulipatam on the east coast in 1611 and
Surat on the west coast in 1612. The company rented a small trading outpost in
Madras in 1639.
The presidencies Joppen1907India1700a.jpg |The Indian peninsula in 1700, showing the
Mughal Empire and the European trading settlements India1760 1905.jpg |The Indian peninsula in 1760, three years after the
Battle of Plassey, showing the
Maratha Empire and other prominent political states IGI1908MadrasTown2(1).jpg|The presidency town of Madras in a 1908 map. Madras was established as
Fort St. George in 1640. IGI1908IsleBombay2(1).jpg|The presidency town of Bombay (shown here in a 1908 map) was established in 1684. IGI1908CalcuttaTown2.jpg|The presidency town of Calcutta (shown here in a 1908 map) was established in 1690 as
Fort William. •
Madras Presidency: established 1640. •
Bombay Presidency: East India Company's headquarters moved from
Surat to Bombay (Mumbai) in 1687. •
Bengal Presidency: established 1690. After
Robert Clive's victory in the
Battle of Plassey in 1757, the puppet government of a new
Nawab of Bengal, was maintained by the East India Company. However, after the invasion of Bengal by the
Nawab of Oudh in 1764 and his subsequent defeat in the
Battle of Buxar, the Company obtained the
Diwani of Bengal, which included the right to administer and collect land-revenue (land tax) in
Bengal, the region of present-day Bangladesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand and
Bihar beginning from 1772 as per the treaty signed in 1765. Portions of the
Kingdom of Mysore were annexed to the
Madras Presidency after the
Third Anglo-Mysore War ended in 1792. Next, in 1799, after the defeat of
Tipu Sultan in the
Fourth Anglo-Mysore War more of his territory was annexed to the Madras Presidency. File:IGI1908India1765a.jpg|Map of India in 1765 File:Joppen1907India1795a.jpg|Map of India in 1795 File:Joppen1907India1805a.jpg|Map of India in 1805 File:Joppen1907India1823a.jpg|Map of India in 1823 File:IGI1908India1837a.jpg|Map of India in 1837 File:Joppen1907India1848a.jpg|Map of India in 1848 File:IGI1908India1857b-coloured.jpg|Map of India in 1857 File:Joppen1907BritishBengalBritishBurmaA.jpg|Expansion of British Bengal and Burma
The new provinces By 1851, the East India Company's vast and growing holdings across the sub-continent were still grouped into just four main territories: •
Bengal Presidency with its capital at
Calcutta. •
Bombay Presidency with its capital at
Bombay. •
Madras Presidency with its capital at
Madras. •
North-Western Provinces with the seat of the lieutenant-governor at
Agra. The original seat of government was at
Allahabad, then at
Agra from 1834 to 1868. In 1833, an
act of the British Parliament, the
Government of India Act 1833 (
3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 85) promulgated the elevation of the
Ceded and Conquered Provinces to the new
Presidency of Agra, and the appointment of a new governor for the latter, but the plan was never carried out. In 1835 another act of Parliament, the
India (North-West Provinces) Act 1835 (
5 & 6 Will. 4. c. 52) renamed the region the
North-Western Provinces, this time to be administered by a lieutenant-governor, the first of whom, Sir
Charles Metcalfe, would be appointed in 1836. By the time of the
Indian Rebellion of 1857, and the end of Company rule, the developments could be summarised as follows: •
Bombay Presidency: expanded after the
Anglo-Maratha Wars. •
Madras Presidency: expanded in the mid-to-late 18th century
Carnatic Wars and
Anglo-Mysore Wars. •
Bengal Presidency: expanded after the battles of
Plassey (1757) and
Buxar (1764), and after the
Second and
Third Anglo-Maratha Wars. •
Penang: became a residency within the Bengal Presidency in 1786, the fourth presidency of India in 1805, part of the presidency of the
Straits Settlements until 1830, again part of a residency within the Bengal Presidency when the
Straits Settlements became so, and finally separated from British India in 1867. •
Ceded and Conquered Provinces: established in 1802 within the
Bengal Presidency. Proposed to be renamed the
Presidency of Agra under a governor in 1835, but the proposal was not implemented. •
Ajmer-Merwara: ceded by
Sindhia of
Gwalior in 1818 at the conclusion of the
Third Anglo-Maratha War. •
Coorg Province: annexed in 1834. •
North-Western Provinces: established as a lieutenant-governorship in 1836 from the erstwhile
Ceded and Conquered Provinces. •
Sind: annexed to the Bombay Presidency in 1843. •
Punjab Province: established in 1849 from territories captured in the
First and
Second Anglo-Sikh Wars. •
Nagpur Province: created in 1853 from the princely state of Nagpur, seized by the
doctrine of lapse, then merged into the Central Provinces in 1861. •
Oudh State: annexed in 1856 and governed thereafter until 1905 as a 'chief commissionership', as a part of
North-Western Provinces and Oudh. File:Pope1880NorthWesternProv2.jpg|
North-Western Provinces, constituted in 1836 from erstwhile
Ceded and Conquered Provinces File:Pope1880Panjab3.jpg|
Punjab annexed in 1849 File:Pope1880Oudh2.jpg|
Oudh annexed in 1856 ==Administration under the Crown (1858–1947)==