Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
It is a truth that from the western extremity of California to the eastern coast of Japan, there is not a spot where judgement, taste, decency and convenience are so grossly insulted in that scattered and confused chaos of houses, huts, sheds, streets, lanes, alleys, windings, gullies, sinks and tanks which jumbled into an undistinguished mass of filth and corruption, equally offensive to human sense and health, compose the Capital of the English Company's Government in India.
2 A term borrowed from Barnett, Richard, North India between Empires: Awadh, the Mughals and the British, 1720–1801 (University of California Press, 1980), pp. 6–7, to mean groups that are engaged in conflict and cooperation with other groups, in the arena of politics, for greater share in social and economic resources.Google Scholar
3 For details, see Wilson, C. R. (ed.), The Early Annals of the English in Bengal: Being the Bengal Public Consultations for the First-half of the Eighteenth Century (London, 1895; Reprint, Delhi, 1983), vol. I, int. pp. 116–20.Google Scholar
4 Ibid., int. pp. 127–31.
5 General letter from Bengal to the Court, 14 Dec. 1694; Wilson, C. R. (ed.), Indian Records Series—Old Fort William in Bengal—a Selection of Official Documents dealing with its History (London, 1906), vol. I, p. 15.Google Scholar
6 Chuttanuttee Diary and Consultations, March 1698;Google ScholarWilson, , Old Fort, I, p. 35.Google Scholar
7 Ibid.
8 British Museum (henceforth BM) Addl. 24039, f. 37.Google Scholar
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19 See my article, ‘Conflict and Co-operation in Anglo-Mughal Trade Relations during the Reign of Aurangzeb’, The Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient (forthcoming).Google Scholar
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35 General letter from the Court to Bengal, 11 Feb. 1732;Google Scholaribid., p. 136.
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