ABSTRACT

The history of the French in India has received far less scholarly attention than that of other European nations; English historiography, in particular, has often treated it as no more than a preliminary to the extension of British power. In addition, work hitherto has tended to focus on the trade with Europe, not the Asian trade - the 'country trade' carried on within Asia; the full importance of this trade for the Dutch and British is now being recognised. This book represents the first sustained study of French activities in Asian trade, and fills this gap in the historiography. Catherine Manning is concerned to relate the French traders to their social, regional and financial roots, and to trace their connections with other commercial groups in India, both European and Asian. The French evidence that she assembles, including much archival material, also makes a significant contibution to the debate about economic decline and renewal in 18th-century India. Her analysis stresses the importance of the Indian context, and shows that economic and political developments in South India were crucial to the French move from trade to war in the 1740s. Finally the book examines why the French failed in an enterprise which was to succeed so signally for the British only a few decades later.

chapter II|27 pages

The French Company, 1664–1748

chapter III|23 pages

The French Community in India

chapter V|19 pages

The French Partner

chapter VI|19 pages

The European and Christian Partner

chapter VII|22 pages

The Indian Partner

chapter VIII|26 pages

The Westward Routes

chapter IX|17 pages

The Eastern Routes and Inland Trade

chapter X|24 pages

From Trade to War

chapter XI|2 pages

Conclusion