meeting the Nizam of Hyderabad
Muzaffar Jung In 1740, the
War of the Austrian Succession broke out in Europe. Great Britain was drawn into the war in 1744, opposed to
France and its allies. The trading companies of both countries maintained cordial relations in India while their parent countries were bitter enemies on the European continent. Dodwell writes, "Such were the friendly relations between the English and the French that the French sent their goods and merchandise from
Pondicherry to
Madras for safe custody." Although French company officials were ordered to avoid conflict, British officials were not, and were furthermore notified that a
Royal Navy fleet was en route. After the British initially captured a few French merchant ships, the French called for backup from as far afield as
Isle de France (now
Mauritius), beginning an escalation in naval forces in the area. In July 1746, French commander
La Bourdonnais and British Admiral
Edward Peyton fought
an indecisive action off Negapatam, after which the British fleet withdrew to Bengal. On 21 September 1746, the French
captured the British outpost at Madras. La Bourdonnais had promised to return Madras to the British, but
Joseph François Dupleix withdrew that promise, and wanted to give Madras to Anwar-ud-din after the capture. The Nawab then sent a 10,000-man army to take Madras from the French but was decisively repulsed by a small French force in the
Battle of Adyar. The French then made several attempts to capture the British
Fort St. David at
Cuddalore, but the timely arrivals of reinforcements halted these and eventually turned the tables on the French. British Admiral
Edward Boscawen besieged Pondicherry in the later months of 1748, but lifted the siege with the advent of the
monsoon rains in October. With the termination of the
War of the Austrian Succession in Europe, the
First Carnatic War also came to an end. In the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748), Madras was given back to the British in exchange for the French
fortress of Louisbourg in North America, which the British
had captured. The war was principally notable in India as the first military experience of
Robert Clive, who was taken prisoner at Madras but managed to escape, and who then participated in the defence of Cuddalore and the siege of
Pondicherry. The French retained their position as the protectors of nizams of Hyderabad. == Second Carnatic War (1749–1754) ==