يحاول ذهب - حر
FROM MADRAS TO MENLO PARK
August 24, 2025
|THE WEEK India
The East India Company's trading triumphs paved the way for the British empire. Today, Big Tech is carving the world into digital colonies for the US and China. Can India break free?
In the late 1630s, a young Englishman named Francis Day sailed along India's Coromandel Coast. Born into a noble family and educated at Eton, Day sought to make a fortune overseas.
Global trade was expanding, fuelled by Europe's hunger for silk, spices and other exotic goods. Like many of his peers, Day had joined the fledgling East India Company in search of new markets. His mission: find a strategic site near the region's famed weaving centres-somewhere ships could anchor, a fort could be built, and commerce could flourish.
He settled on a strip of land near a quiet fishing village called Madraspatnam, ruled by a chieftain of the Vijayanagara empire. The location was suitable, but not ideal. The anchorage was good enough, but docking was difficult in rough weather. Still, Day chose the site. Legend has it that, strategic reasons aside, there were matters of the heart: he had fallen for a village beauty.
Day secured a land grant from the chieftain. In return for tribute, the East India Company was granted the right to build a fortified settlement-exempt from local taxes and governed autonomously.
Over the next decade, Fort St George rose-brick by brick, bastion by bastion. Around it, Madras began to take shape. Two parallel settlements emerged: "White Town", home to European traders and administrators, and "Black Town", where Indian merchants and artisans were given tax exemptions. Business boomed, company coffers swelled, and a portion of the trade revenue-some minted into coins by the company itself-flowed back to the local rulers.
هذه القصة من طبعة August 24, 2025 من THE WEEK India.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من THE WEEK India
THE WEEK India
MASSIVE ADMISSION INTAKE MUST BE REWORKED
INTERVIEW: Professor Onkar Singh former governing board member, IIT Kanpur and IIT (BHU) Varanasi
2 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
KNOWLEDGE WARRIORS
A simple mantra—what problem can I solve—is reshaping college education in India
5 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
IN GREEN WE TRUST
Inside the Congress leadership's secretive green paper system that quietly drives crucial decisions
3 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
Flower power
Thanks to government policy and scientific intervention, Bhaderwah’s lavender fields have become the epicentre of India’s Purple Revolution. The next step: going global
4 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
The pineal gland
The first thing I noticed was that he never looked me in the eye.
3 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
A centennial gift for the naked dancer
For a hundred years, she danced with naked abandon, and the world of antiquarians enjoyed watching her.
2 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
BUILT DIFFERENT
India’s premier technology institutes are rethinking what an engineer should be Darling, can you buy a pint of milk,” asked the engineer's wife.
4 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
The return of trust
A new, evolving framework for returning money to victims is reshaping the Enforcement Directorate’s response to financial fraud
7 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
HOW YOU THINK MATTERS FAR MORE THAN WHAT YOU KNOW
Sunil Chemmankotil country manager, Adecco India
2 mins
July 05, 2026
THE WEEK India
THE LEGEND IN SLO-MO
His brace against Uzbekistan notwithstanding, Cristiano Ronaldo is searching for the speed and mobility that made him one of the greatest attackers of all time
7 mins
July 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
