Danish and other European settlements in Sri Lanka and India.
The Danish East India Company[1] (Danish: Ostindisk Kompagni[2]) refers to two separate Danish-Norwegian chartered companies. The first company operated between 1616 and 1650. The second company existed between 1670 and 1729, however, in 1730 it was re-founded as the Asiatic Company (Danish: Asiatisk Kompagni).
^"The Danish East India Company". Archived from the original on 11 October 2007. Retrieved 12 April 2004.
^"Ostindisk Kompagni". Den Store Danske (Gyldendal) (in Danish). Archived from the original on 4 February 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
and 26 Related for: Danish East India Company information
The DanishEastIndiaCompany (Danish: Ostindisk Kompagni) refers to two separate Danish-Norwegian chartered companies. The first company operated between...
DanishIndia (Danish: Dansk Ostindien) was the name given to the colonies of Denmark (Denmark–Norway before 1814) in the Indian subcontinent, forming...
The Danish West IndiaCompany (Danish: Vestindisk kompagni) or Danish West India–Guinea Company (Det Vestindisk-Guineisk kompagni) was a Dano-Norwegian...
The EastIndiaCompany (EIC) was an English, and later British, joint-stock company founded in 1600 and dissolved in 1874. It was formed to trade in the...
the Dutch EastIndiaCompany for eighteen years. Borg stated that if there was a war between Sweden and Denmark, he could deliver the Danish fort in Tharangambadi...
1559–1645) The Danish colonial empire in North America, the West Indies, the Gold Coast and India County of Greenland, DenmarkDanish Realm, sovereign...
The Portuguese EastIndiaCompany (Portuguese: Companhia do commércio da Índia or Companhia da Índia Oriental) was a short-lived and ill-fated attempt...
Company rule in India (sometimes Company Raj, from Hindi: rāj, lit. 'rule') was the rule of the British EastIndiaCompany on the Indian subcontinent....
West IndiaCompany may refer to: Danish West IndiaCompany, (1659–1776), Danish-Norwegian chartered company, also active in the slave trade Dutch West...
Danish overseas colonies and Dano-Norwegian colonies (Danish: De danske kolonier) were the colonies that Denmark–Norway (Denmark after 1814) possessed...
Swedish Africa Company 1671 Danish West IndiaCompany 1721 Bergen Greenland Company 1731–1813 Swedish EastIndiaCompany 1749 General Trade Company 1774 Royal...
Company of the Moluccas Company of Habitants Company of One Hundred Associates Company of Scotland Comprador Courteen association DanishEastIndia Company...
The French EastIndiaCompany (French: Compagnie française pour le commerce des Indes orientales) was a joint-stock company founded in France on 1 September...
Danes from Balasore (Danish: Udvisningen af danskerene fra Balasore) was a violent expulsion and ousting of the DanishEastIndiaCompany from the Mughal habour...
the Danish West Indies until 1905, when the Danish state sold it to the East Asiatic Company, a private shipping company. The Danish West India-Guinea...
Marshall, pp. 133–34. Rasmussen, Peter Ravn (1996). "Tranquebar: The DanishEastIndiaCompany 1616–1669". University of Copenhagen. Archived from the original...
commerce with the Dutch EastIndiaCompany, the French EastIndiaCompany, the DanishEastIndiaCompany and the British EastIndiaCompany. Silver taka of Raja...
Austrian EastIndiaCompany (German: Österreichische Ostindien-Kompanie) is a catchall term referring to a series of Austrian trading companies based in...
European companies, including the British EastIndiaCompany, the French EastIndiaCompany, the Dutch EastIndiaCompany and the DanishEastIndiaCompany, conducted...
from the DanishEastIndiaCompany arrived in the Nicobar Islands on 12 December 1755. On 1 January 1756, the Nicobar Islands were made a Danish colony...