Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps and Images
- Tables
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Artillery Fortification at Home and Abroad
- Chapter 2 “A Company of Commerce, but also of State” The VOC in South Asia
- Chapter 3 The Van Goens System: Building the Fortifications, 1650-1675
- Chapter 4 Criticism and Construction: Debating and Building the Forts, 1675-1700
- Chapter 5 Mughal Decline and the Company: from Chowghat to Bedara 1717-1759
- Chapter 6 After Bedara: Attempting to Improve Defenses, 1759-1780
- Chapter 7 A Plague of Engineers: Ceylon 1780-1789
- Chapter 8 The Military Committee: The Generality Intervenes, 1787-1792
- Chapter 9 Fall of a Fortress
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Some Remarks on Terminology and Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index
- Colonial and Global History through Dutch Sources
Chapter 8 - The Military Committee: The Generality Intervenes, 1787-1792
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2025
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps and Images
- Tables
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Artillery Fortification at Home and Abroad
- Chapter 2 “A Company of Commerce, but also of State” The VOC in South Asia
- Chapter 3 The Van Goens System: Building the Fortifications, 1650-1675
- Chapter 4 Criticism and Construction: Debating and Building the Forts, 1675-1700
- Chapter 5 Mughal Decline and the Company: from Chowghat to Bedara 1717-1759
- Chapter 6 After Bedara: Attempting to Improve Defenses, 1759-1780
- Chapter 7 A Plague of Engineers: Ceylon 1780-1789
- Chapter 8 The Military Committee: The Generality Intervenes, 1787-1792
- Chapter 9 Fall of a Fortress
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Some Remarks on Terminology and Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index
- Colonial and Global History through Dutch Sources
Summary
The diminutive size of the city requires that all Military Buildings, being the aforementioned arsenal, the Barracks, the Hospital and the Magazines of supplies, must be in bomb-proof casemates, and as far as possible fire-resistant against red-hot shot, for it is probable that the cannonades and bombardments will make all locations equally unsafe…
Carl Friedrich Reimer, 1790The final inspection of the VOC's military state in all of its Asian and African possessions was conducted by a Military Committee specially formed for the task in 1789-1792. Strikingly, this committee was not formed by the VOC in Asia, but rather was the result of an initiative taken by the Admiralty of Amsterdam. Writing on the state of the fort at Trincomalee in 1790, the committee clearly articulated the vulnerability of a small fort to bombardment by mortar and red-hot shot. This chapter will follow the evaluations and recommendations of this committee as it inspected the fortifications of Ceylon and Malabar in 1789-1790. The inspection of the defenses would be used to articulate proposals for their improvement and the engineer attached to the committee had the power to overrule the VOC's engineers and submit the final plans for improvemet. Given that, the selection of the chief engineer for this mission was of course a sensitive choice. But why was a committee that operated outside the regular VOC chain of command formed in the first place? The committee illustrates an important change in the relations between the Generality and the VOC. Since the first naval squadron under J.P. van Braam had been sent immediately after the Fourth Anglo- Dutch War, the admiralties of the Dutch Republic had continuously maintained small naval squadrons in Asia. Defense of the Asian possessions was no longer the exclusive responsibility of the VOC even before the committee was formed. Working outside the VOC hierarchy, the Military Committee would be able to present the States-General with an independent assessment of the state of defense of the empire in the East.
While the engineers had been debating their plans in Asia throughout the 1780s, events in the Netherlands had taken a dramatic turn, which would ultimately decide the engineers’ quarrels. The poor performance of the VOC in the war with Britain had convinced many in the Republic that intervention by the Generality was warranted.
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- Information
- The Company FortressMilitary Engineering and the Dutch East India Company in South Asia, 1638-1795, pp. 219 - 242Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020