The Swedish East India Company ( Swedish : Svenska Ostindiska Companiet ; SOIC ) was founded in Gothenburg , Sweden, in 1731 for the purpose of conducting trade with India , China and the Far East . The venture was inspired by the success of the Dutch East India Company and the British East India Company . This made Gothenburg a European Centre of trade in eastern products. The main goods were black pepper , spices , silk , tea , furniture, porcelain, precious stones and other distinctive luxury items. Trade with India and China saw the arrival of some new customs in Sweden . The cultural influence increased, and tea , rice , arrack (a drink made from fermented sap or sugarcane) and new root vegetables started appearing in Swedish homes.
81-673: It grew to become the largest trading company in Sweden during the 18th century: a total of 132 expeditions were carried out with 37 different ships. The company folded in 1813; nevertheless, it left clear footprints that can still be seen in Gothenburg. Sweden was the last of the more prominent seafaring European nations to engage in the East India Trade. The royal privileges for the Swedish East India Company (SOIC) were granted almost
162-668: A privateer by the town of Middelburg . Both he and Campbell had previously visited China. The crew for the ship was approximately one hundred men. The expedition started well – passing the Cape of Good Hope and crossing the Indian Ocean , the vessel arrived safely in Canton (now known as Guangzhou ), the trading port for foreigners in China at that time, in September 1732. For the next four months, trading
243-563: A ban on all chintz imports. In 1720 the Parliament of Great Britain enacted a law that forbade "the Use and Warings in Apparel of imported chintz, and also its use or Wear in or about any Bed, Chair, Cushion or other Household furniture". Spain followed England and France to ban calico imports . Firstly in 1717 Asian textiles were banned. Then in 1728 the import of European made imitations of Asian textiles
324-506: A century after the other European trading companies were established. With the advent of the East India trade in the 17th century, Chinese and Indian goods were imported to Sweden. Drinking tea, wearing Indian Chintz clothes and having Chinese objects became the height of fashion among Swedish socialites and the middle class. Culture, philosophy, art, agriculture, and architecture were also studied and copied. The most prominent example of this
405-465: A charter was not entirely uncontroversial during that time when mercantilism , which advocated regulations so that the production of export goods was promoted and import reduced, was the dominant idea for trade. Opposition became even more apparent after the first journey made by the ship Friedericus Rex Sueciaes in 1735. Demands were made in the Riksdag for sanctions and restrictions for the trade company,
486-581: A competing trade company in Austria , the Ostend Company , was discouraging. What finally made the Swedish venture possible was the strong support from foreign traders and merchants, foremost British but also Dutch, who had been shut out from the companies in their respective countries. The majority of the investors, as well as the buyers of the goods imported by the company, were foreigners. Granting permission for
567-562: A considerable and well-armed fleet of ships. They started by offering the Swedish King Charles XII half a million pounds sterling and 25 armed ships for his protection, but the matter was not resolved. In 1718, representatives for the pirates met again with the King at his camp during the campaign against Norway . The new offer was for 60 ships, armed and stocked with goods, if the pirates were allowed to settle down in Gothenburg and start
648-489: A four (1785–86). The last vessel returned to Gothenburg in March 1806, and even though the company had charters until 1821, it ceased to exist in 1813. Life onboard the ships was hard and hazardous, the crew was malnourished and not used to the heat and humidity in the ports they visited during the journey. In addition to this, the doctors on board were completely helpless when it came to dealing with fevers and tropical illnesses. It
729-415: A joint-stock company by creating a fixed fund where anyone could subscribe for shares, but not for less than 500 riksdaler in silver. Even after the company went public, it still retained its secrecy regarding the business. The management deliberately withheld information from the shareholders or lied about how profitable parts of the business were. The directors said that the profit from the trade with China
810-594: A light background, but there are some popular patterns on black backgrounds as well. Cloth that Changed the World is a book about chintz by Sarah Fee that explains the story of Indian chintz. Siege of Fredriksten The siege of Fredriksten ( Norwegian : Beleiringen av Fredriksten festning ) was an attack on the Norwegian fortress of Fredriksten in the city of Fredrikshald (now Halden ) by King Charles XII of Sweden . While inspecting his troops' lines, Charles XII
891-408: A number of pamphlets were written, arguing that Swedish steel and timber were wastefully being exchanged for such "worthless goods" as tea and porcelain . One of the most ardent critics against the charter was Johan Arckenholtz. He even spoke of the moral aspects, saying that the Swedish population "would be weaned from work and crafts and lose their health, strength and spirit by using products from
SECTION 10
#1732845456113972-491: A respectable Swede to front the company. That person would be commissioner Henrik König, a Swede of German ( Bremen ) origin. In 1729, Henrik König submitted an application for a charter for two ships. He supported his request on the charter given previously to other applicants, but the reaction from the Swedish government was reluctant: the closing of the Ostend Company in 1731, following British diplomatic pressure as part of
1053-399: A set for his wife.) It has been suggested that wearing them as clothes began when these were replaced and given to maidservants, who made them into dresses, and also that they were first worn as linings. With imported chintz becoming so popular with Europeans during the late 17th century, French and English mills grew concerned, as they did not know how to make chintz. In 1686 France declared
1134-435: A siege of Akershus. By first taking the border areas, Charles wished to avoid a repeat of the fiasco he had suffered two years before. The 1,400-strong garrison of Frederiksten fought ferociously to hold back the invasion, but suffered a severe setback when, on 8 December the forward fortification, Gyldenløve fort, at Fredriksten fell. Encouraged by their very hard-fought success the Swedish army intensified their efforts against
1215-522: A trade with the East Indies under the Swedish flag. One privateer by the name of Morgan actually obtained a charter for an East India Company and a letter of appointment for himself as governor over the colonies that could be the result of such an enterprise. When the King was shot and died on 30 November 1718, the venture folded. Sweden was impoverished after the Great Northern War , and trade
1296-546: A trading company for twelve years, from the Swedish King Gustav II Adolf . The privileges included clauses about the ethics of trading with foreign, indigenous people. The first priority was to establish friendly, long-term relations that would be mutually beneficiary for both parties. The venture was supported by a number of prominent Swedes, including the King himself, but raising the necessary money proved harder. Political difficulties and Sweden's participation in
1377-468: A warmer climate". The emerging Swedish textile industry was also threatened by the trade, and the new company soon promised to refrain from shipping textiles. Of sixty-one successfully returning voyages between 1733 and 1767, only three (in 1735, 1740, and 1742) carried cotton and silk textiles and raw silk from Bengal . Some opposition may have been rooted in pure jealousy of the profits the SOIC were making from
1458-643: Is also attributed to novelist George Eliot , who in 1851 wrote about muslin fabric to her sister, saying: "The quality of the spotted one is best, but the effect is chintzy." This is believed to have been said about cheap British imitations of real chintz, which became common at the time. Chintz was originally a woodblock printed , painted or stained calico produced in Hyderabad , India from 1600 to 1800 and popular for bed covers , quilts and draperies . After Vasco da Gama successfully reached Calicut in India in 1498,
1539-450: Is derived from the Hindi : छींट , romanized : chīṁṭ , pronounced [t͜ʃʰĩːʈ] , meaning "spotted", "variegated", "speckled", or "sprayed". Since the 19th century the term has also been used for the style of floral decoration developed in those calico textiles, but then used more widely, for example on chintzware pottery and wallpaper . Chintz designs are derived from
1620-475: Is estimated that about 2,000 men died in the service of the company. The first three directors of the SOIC was Henrik König, Colin Campbell and Frans Bedoire. König was a merchant from Stockholm. Bedoir was the son of a French wigmaker who had relocated to Sweden to import French wine. Campbell was the driving force for the whole enterprise since he had gained firsthand knowledge of the China trade as supercargo for
1701-446: Is evident that the voyages were extremely profitable for the shareholders, and many Swedes became wealthy due to the SOIC. From Gothenburg the vessels carried iron, both in bars and processed, as axes, anchors, steel, etc. Copper was also brought, as was timber. The expeditions called at Cádiz where they traded goods to acquire essential Spanish silver, on which the China trade depended in
SECTION 20
#17328454561131782-487: Is the Chinese Pavilion at Drottningholm , which was followed by smaller parks like the one built by Jean Abraham Grill at Godegård . This culminated during the 18th century, when many Swedish scientists and politicians even suggested that Sweden should be governed by intellectual bureaucrats, " mandarins ", led by a sovereign king in a Chinese manner. The first attempt of organizing a Swedish East India trading company
1863-623: The Riksdag of the Estates where the first two political parties, the Hats and the Caps , competed for power. The king did not even have to attend the meetings of the Riksdag; he had been substituted with his name stamp. The king, or prince consort, at that time was Frederick I , considered the most incompetent king of Sweden by many contemporary politicians and later historians. His only interests were hunting and women;
1944-604: The Solen (the Sun) and the Trumslagaren (the Drummer), to Lisbon for salt. A later attempt to establish the Swedish trade on the East Indies was made by pirates sailing out from Madagascar . After having attacked other trading ships, they had become wealthy and were looking for a place to settle down and invest their money in legitimate enterprise. The pirates numbered about 1,500 and commanded
2025-618: The Thirty Years' War , where King Gustav II was killed, put an end to the plans. The resources were instead used for a smaller company, trading within Europe. The next attempt to start a trading company was made in 1661, by German merchant Erlenkamp, who suggested a route over the Arctic Ocean , the Northern Sea Route , past Japan and further on to China and India . The aim was to bypass
2106-685: The Treaty of Vienna , boded ill for the Swedes' competition against the main powers when trade and politics were so intimately associated. König took the matters to the Swedish parliament and succeeded, gaining royal privileges for the company on 14 June 1731, initially for a period of 15 years. These privileges were the First Charter, or the First Octroi . The charter was given to Henrik König & Compagnie and consisted of eighteen precise paragraphs on how
2187-561: The Cape (now known as Cape Town ), a port controlled by the Dutch, due to political changes in Europe. But with the end of the American war in 1783, Sweden lost its advantage in the tea trade and the decline of the company resumed. The SOIC's supercargo in Canton in 1777, Finnish Peter Johan Bladh, reflected on this and suggested that an emissary should be sent to the emperor of China with a proposition that
2268-505: The Danish fort in Tharangambadi , India, to the Swedes. Knut Kurck, Peter Schnack and Johan Olivecreutz were appointed directors for the company, but the political unrest in Sweden at that time plus trouble with actually getting the money that had been promised from the investors thwarted this venture as well, and in 1674, the charter was dissolved. Residual resources were used to send two ships,
2349-417: The Dutch argued that they had suspected the vessel of falsely flying the Swedish flag. The expedition was eventually released, but time was lost and the winds unfavourable. Many of the seamen died en route and the ship had to recruit new Norwegian sailors upon reaching the coast of Norway. Almost one and a half years after the departure, the vessel returned to Gothenburg on 27 August 1733. The expedition
2430-509: The European trade with China should be conducted through one single European company, administered by Sweden. He stated that unless the British were stopped in time they would infiltrate China the same way they had done in India by "securing an unbearable domination" there. The request was never sent since the directors wanted to continue the trade in the same way as before. The mercantile expansion of
2511-459: The Ostend Company. He was knighted by King Frederick I and moved to Gothenburg to organize the first expedition. The first two expeditions proved dangerous and complicated since the rest of the trading nations did not take kindly to Sweden's attempt to engage in the trade. The first ship was seized by the Dutch and the second was destroyed by the British and the French. This fueled the opposition against
Swedish East India Company - Misplaced Pages Continue
2592-454: The SOIC during the third octroi provided a setting for Jacob Wallenberg 's comic Min son på galejan ("My Son on [ sic ] the Galley") written during the 18-month round trip to Canton in 1769–71. Among his other joking and casual racism, Wallenberg parodies the serious accounts published by traveling naturalists in the wide web of Carl Linnaeus' correspondence. The SOIC continued into
2673-606: The Spanish and Portuguese blockades. The plan did not gain any support as the ice barriers proved even more difficult. At the end of the 1660s, a petition from diplomat and London resident Johan Leijonbergh was sent to the Swedish King Charles XI regarding one Olle Borg who had worked in the Dutch East India Company for eighteen years. Borg stated that if there was a war between Sweden and Denmark, he could deliver
2754-470: The Stockholm merchants Anders Plomgren and Abraham Grill . These six members of the board later elected Claes Grill , Jacob von Utfall Jeanson, S. N. Wenngren and Nils Ström as directors. The second charter was for 20 years and the directors followed the ways of the first octroi. They collected the means from the investors to fund each of the first 14 ships separately. In 1753, the company was reorganized into
2835-422: The Swedes from doing business there and several incidents occurred. The company decided to refocus in the China trade instead. That trade yielded an average profit of 30–40% during the second charter. When it was time to renew the charter in 1766, the first directors were Robert Finlay of Irish and Scottish origin, Swedish Fabian Löwen and Georg Herman Conradi of German descent, all residing in Stockholm. With this
2916-497: The applications was appointed on 24 March 1746, and some weeks later on 14 May, they concluded that the directors from the first charter were best suited to lead the second as well. However, the number of directors was increased from three to at least seven. In addition to Colin Campbell, Niclas Sahlgren and Teodor Ankarcrona, the directors were former secretary of the Executive Board Magnus Lagerström,
2997-491: The close of the Great Northern War , the Norwegian Army had been weakened in early 1716 by withdrawal of 5000 of the best troops to Denmark. When rumors reached Christiania (now Oslo) that Charles XII was preparing to invade, all remaining troops in Østerdal and Gudbrandsdal were ordered to the border at Halden and Fredrikstad. The Norwegians expected Swedish forces to invade at Kongsvinger , Basmo and/or Halden. It
3078-454: The company also played a part. Thus, the books were burned after they had been closed and revised, effectively concealing the company's dealings from contemporaries and historians. The letter of privilege was translated into French and Latin and distributed to the major powers. Their reaction was reluctant and they made clear that they considered the new company a most unwelcome competitor. The Swedish ambassador to Britain did not dare to present
3159-415: The company to receive Swedish citizenship and most of the crew aboard the ships during the first and the second octroi were foreigners. Of the 53 supercargoes during the first octroi, about 22 percent were Swedes . The first expedition was organized by Campbell. His reconstructed diary of the voyage, rediscovered in 1986, contains a complete account of the expedition. It started on 9 February 1732, as
3240-538: The established trading nations, primarily England, the Netherlands and France, to help and acknowledge the SOIC during the first years were founded on the suspicion that the company was merely a front for those merchants who wished to circumvent the rules and regulations of the East India trade in their own countries. These suspicions were well founded. All of the initiators of the SOIC were non-swedes or of foreign origin. Swedish law made it possible for anyone who invested in
3321-611: The fabric became known in Europe. Around 1600, Portuguese and Dutch traders were bringing examples of Indian chintz into Europe on a small scale, but the English and French merchants began sending large quantities. By 1680 more than a million pieces of chintz were being imported into England per year, and a similar quantity was going to France and the Dutch Republic. These early imports were probably mostly used for curtains, furnishing fabrics, and bed hangings and covers ( Samuel Pepys bought
Swedish East India Company - Misplaced Pages Continue
3402-426: The first charter. Four of the ships were lost at sea. Only three of these expeditions went to Bengal ; the rest sailed directly to Canton. Books and accounts from the first expeditions are missing, partially or completely, but starting with the eighth expedition (the ships Fredericus Rex Sueciae , Stockholm and Riddarhuset in 1740) until the closing of the last in 1748, records were so complete that an estimate of
3483-453: The following. Chests of tea: Textiles: Chintz Chintz ( / tʃ ɪ n t s / ) is a woodblock printed , painted, stained or glazed calico textile that originated in Golconda (present day Hyderabad , India) in the 16th century. The cloth is printed with designs featuring flowers and other patterns in different colours, typically on a light, plain background. The name
3564-468: The form of coins, pesos duros , since the charter stated that the silver carried to China, coined or uncoined, could not be Swedish. The company also had to pay tax to the Dey of Algiers and carry Moroccan passports, thereby being ensured protection from raids by Barbary pirates . These transactions are documented in receipts. The return on expeditions could be around 25–30% of the capital invested, but up to 60%
3645-435: The fourth charter, much the same company that had existed during the last part of the third. The management was the same, a fixed fund existed and some of the fees, taxes and regulations were altered. During this octroi, the company owned 12 ships that were sent out on a total of 31 journeys. Three of the ships were lost and one was damaged and sold. The shareholders received no dividend during the fourth octroi. The profit from
3726-402: The investors' faith in the trade now broken, no ships were sent out and at a shareholders meeting on 13 December 1813, the company folded, eight years before the octroi ended. The remaining stock and inventory was sold to foreign buyers and in 1814, the trade was declared free for anyone. The main valuable cargo from China was tea. In an overview from 1774, its share was about 90%. Much of
3807-520: The king's absence gave the Riksdag and the bureaucrats a free rein to promote trade and science. During its entire existence from 1731 to 1813, the SOIC made 131 voyages, using 37 different ships. Of these, eight ships were lost, totally or partially. The sorest loss was probably the Götheborg in 1745, as it sank just off Älvsborg fortress at the entrance to Gothenburg having managed to journey safely to China and back. Even though most books were burned, it
3888-559: The later part of the third charter, it became common practice for one of the supercargoes to stay on permanently in Canton for years. One of those was Jean Abraham Grill, who made ample use of his time there for his own private affairs, a practice that was continued by other resident supercargoes. Carl Linnaeus and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences also made use of the company's ships. They sent out scientists and researchers to gather information about animals and plants from all
3969-442: The letter to the British government. Pledges of assistance at their bases if needed were not answered. France and the Netherlands declared that they saw Sweden as a competitor and they would not contribute to or assist in such a venture. After having been ruled by a number of autocratic and ambitious kings, Sweden was, at the forming of the SOIC, practically run without the participation of the king. The real political power lay with
4050-424: The main fort. The Swedish trenches had almost reached the main fortification walls when on the evening of 11 December (Swedish calendar: 30 November 1718, a projectile (probably a large musket ball or grapeshot ) struck Charles XII through the left temple while he inspected the trench-works and killed him. The death of the king effectively ended the attack on Fredriksten and the invasion was called off, leading to
4131-406: The necessary provisions for a successful siege of Akershus Fortress. Charles' troops attempted to take Frederiksten by storm on 4 July. His troops took the town after fierce fighting, but the citizens set fire to their own houses, forcing Charles, unable to take the fortress, to retreat and await the arrival of heavy siege guns. Unfortunately for the invading army the entire Swedish transport fleet
SECTION 50
#17328454561134212-417: The only supplier of tea. This was reflected in the total sum of the profit for the third octroi, which was 58% higher than the previous two. The goods that were exported from Sweden also changed during that period. The former main products such as iron, wood and tar are missing from the freight lists. Instead the biggest item was silver, followed by English lead and Swedish woollen cloth or broadcloth . During
4293-415: The places that the ships visited and to keep detailed journals. The company would not allow idle passengers on board, so most of the scientists were given "crash courses" in theology and were hastily ordained to serve as ship's chaplains. These arrangements started during the second charter and peaked during the third. In 1758, the Swedes were finally able to let their ships anchor and replenish provisions at
4374-454: The power within the management shifted from Gothenburg to Stockholm, where two new ships also were bought. The Swedish government extorted a loan at 6% interest to the SOIC to be paid during 1766–69, estimated in 1813 to have been the equivalent of £100,000, and another, interest-free, for half of that sum, to be repaid out of import duties, in essence an advance payment of duty. During the third charter, 39 voyages were made to Canton and none of
4455-482: The profitable East India trade and they now looked to Sweden. Scottish merchant Colin Campbell , formerly active in the Ostend Company, met with Swedish Niclas Sahlgren during Sahlgren's stay in Amsterdam in the late 1720s. Together they made plans for a Swedish trading company, but it was evident that Campbell was the driving force in the enterprise. Since foreign investors were met with suspicion in Sweden, they needed
4536-438: The profits could be made for these. The total sum of the income from the imported goods was 24.649 million riksdaler (approx. US$ 1,222.6 million), making the dividend about 39% in average. During those years the share of the profit for the five directors totaled 550,000 riksdaler (approx. US$ 27.28 million) and the total sum that went to the 53 supercargoes was about 800,000 riksdaler (approx. US$ 39.67 million). The unwillingness of
4617-410: The shareholders of the situation and on 18 May 1811, the company of the fourth charter was declared bankrupt. There was a fifth octroi, starting in 1806 with privileges granted for 15 years, but those were quite different from the previous. Now anyone had the right to trade with the countries on the other side of Cape if the SOIC had not started the trade by launching a ship within two years. With
4698-578: The ship Friedericus Rex Sueciae sailed out from Gothenburg. Campbell was the first supercargo onboard and had also been appointed ambassador to the Chinese court by the King. The other three supercargos were English: Charles Graham, Charles Morford and John Pike. The captain of the Fredericus was Georg Herman af Trolle, a seasoned sailor who had been brought up in Amsterdam and previously served on English, French, Dutch and Danish ships. He had also been employed as
4779-532: The ships was lost or damaged, but the profit from the trade with China was declining. The turning point for Sweden came in 1780, with the American Revolutionary War when France, the Dutch Republic and Spain joined forces against Britain and thereafter were blocked from trading with China. The price of tea fell in Canton due to the lack of demand, but went up in Europe where Sweden was now practically
4860-736: The style of Indian designs themselves reflecting Mughal art . A white base with floral and animal prints are its basic characteristics. Unglazed calico was traditionally called " cretonne ". The word calico is derived from the name of the Indian city Calicut (Kozhikkode in native Malayalam ), to which it had a manufacturing association. In modern English, the words "chintz" and "chintzy" can be used to refer to clothing or furnishings which are regarded as vulgar, suburban, petit-bourgeois or unfashionably florid in taste, and in informal speech, to refer to cheap, low quality, or gaudy things, and to describe mean or stingy personal behavior. The term 'chintzy'
4941-518: The tea was re-exported and smuggled into England, undercutting the prices of that country's own trade monopoly held by the East India Company . Porcelain was also important, accounting for about 5% of the cargo's value. Over the years it is estimated that some 50 million pieces of porcelain were imported by the SOIC. The spirit arrack , a new commodity for Sweden, was also considered valuable. A cargo tally, printed by William Milburn in 1813, shows
SECTION 60
#17328454561135022-419: The terms of the second charter 36 ships were sent out, three to Surat , the rest to Canton, and only one was lost. The profit for the shareholders during the first charter generated large interest for a second charter. Except for the foreign investors, most of the merchants during the first charter had been from Gothenburg. With the second charter, a number of merchants from Stockholm started to show interest in
5103-411: The trade continued to decline, much because of the new rules and regulations regarding the import of tea to England. Most of the SOIC's earlier tea cargoes had been smuggled to England, but the profit no longer made up for the risk of such an undertaking. Talk of shutting down the company started in 1789, and after 1804, no more ships were sent out from Sweden. On 27 June 1808, the company informed
5184-409: The trade in Sweden and the SOIC started a massive PR-campaign about the benefits of trading with the East Indies. They also agreed to make certain concessions about what goods to import from China. To avoid confrontations with the other trading countries, the company refrained from seeking trade with India and focused on China instead. A total of 15 expeditions supported by 25 ships were launched during
5265-459: The trade should be conducted: The issuing of shares was such that early subscribers subscribed for each voyage and had the option of withdrawing their capital after its completion, in a traditional form of corporate trading partnerships; in 1753, this having been found inconvenient, it was determined that capital should be considered invested in the company as a whole, on the model of other East India companies. A partner desiring to withdraw his funds
5346-429: The trade. On 23 September 1745, a request for a second octroi was presented by the firm Abraham and Jacob Arfwedsson & Co . They received a preliminary grant for it. A couple of weeks later, a second request for an octroi was made by the company Anders Plomgren & C:o and partner Carl Broman. The directors from the first charter submitted their request on 20 January 1746. A commission to investigate
5427-607: The trade. Those who supported the establishing of a Swedish trade company argued that if people wanted goods from China, they were going to buy them anyway and it would be better to import them using Swedish ships and trading company, and thereby keep the profits within Sweden. With the suspension of the charter for the Ostend company by the Emperor Charles VI in May 1727, the investors in that company had to look for other ways to be part of
5508-528: Was a huge economic success, the auction bringing in some 900,000 Swedish riksdaler. The dividend paid was 75% of the capital invested. According to the ledgers of the Gothenburg Main Customs Cambers for Sea Trade in 1733 to 1734, goods for 518,972 riksdaler were exported; the rest stayed in Sweden. The charter was renewed in 1746, 1766 and 1786, creating the Second, Third and Fourth Octrois. Under
5589-458: Was achieved. Much depended on the merchants and the captain; the merchants had to close numerous favourable deals, and the captain had the difficult task of safely sailing the ship to China and back. The vessels were around 50 metres (160 ft) long, and in addition to cargo and men, each ship also carried about 25–30 cannons for self-defence and signaling. In most years of the period after 1766 one or two SOIC ships were loaded at Canton, or as many
5670-470: Was at Basmo Fortress ( Basmo festning ) where Charles struck, crossing the border on 8 March 1716. The Norwegian scorched earth policy and guerrilla raid interdiction of supply chains by the residents of Bohuslen deprived Charles of supplies, while the fortresses still held by the Norwegians behind his lines threatened his supply chain. Charles took Christiania (now Oslo), but without heavy siege artillery,
5751-454: Was banned in Spain. Additionally the second edict had as one of its objectives to encourage a local, import-substituting weaving and printing industry in imitation of England. Even though chintz was outlawed, there were loopholes in the legislation. The Court of Versailles was outside the law and fashionable young courtiers continued wearing chintz. In 1734, French naval officer M. de Beaulieu, who
5832-671: Was captured or destroyed by the Norwegian naval hero Peter Wessel Tordenskjold (1690-1720) at the Battle of Dynekilen ( Slaget om Dynekilen ) in Bohuslen. Running low on supplies, Charles retreated hastily across the Svinesund and burned the bridges behind him. By 12 July 1716 all Swedish troops had been withdrawn from the area around Fredriksten. Charles came again to besiege the fortress in autumn of 1718 with 40,000 men. He did this intending to first capture Fredriksten fortress to be able to sustain
5913-414: Was carried out successfully. Initially, different spices were the primary commodity along with tea, silk and miscellaneous luxury items, but on later voyages, porcelain and tea made up the bulk of the trade to meet the demand for such goods back in Europe. On its return, the vessel was stopped by the Dutch between Java and Sumatra , and brought to Batavia . Campbell protested and produced his papers, but
5994-405: Was declining and that the company should be granted permission to send a ship to India, contrary to the regulations for the trade so far. An exemption was granted in 1749, and a ship was sent to Surat in India. On its return in 1752, that ship yielded a profit of 103% and two more ships were sent to Surat. The English and the Dutch controlled most of the trade in the town and did everything to prevent
6075-546: Was killed by a projectile. The Swedes broke off the siege, and the Norwegians held the fortress. Along with the Treaty of Nystad three years later, the death of Charles XII marked the end of the imperial era in Sweden , and the beginning of the Age of Liberty ( Swedish : Frihetstiden ) in that country. King Charles XII of Sweden made several campaigns into the city during the Great Northern War (Swedish: Stora nordiska kriget ) as part of his campaign to capture Norway . At
6156-505: Was made by a Flemish merchant, Willem Usselincx . During the 17th century, the Dutch merchants dominated the newly founded Gothenburg on the west coast of Sweden. The town was considered ideal for Sweden's international trade since most of the goods were transported on ships and this was the only major Swedish port accessible without having to pass the Danish customs at Øresund . On 14 June 1626, Usselincx received royal privileges for
6237-472: Was responsible for finding another willing to substitute capital of his own. The reasons for secrecy on finances and shareholders were both internal and external: British citizens were forbidden to engage in trade in Asia on behalf of the Swedish East India Company and within Sweden suspicions ran high against foreigners, as they were thought to threaten the Swedish profits in the region. Jealousy from merchants not in
6318-468: Was seen as an option for rebuilding the country. Opinions about whether trade with the East Indies would be profitable enough diverged. The greatest concern was that Sweden would not have enough resources to defend the company's ships and trading posts . The trading companies from England , France , and the Netherlands did not hesitate to attack other ships to prevent competition. A failed attempt to start
6399-505: Was stationed at Pondicherry , India, sent home letters along with actual samples of chintz fabric during each stage of the process to a chemist friend detailing the dyeing process of cotton chintz. His letters and samples can be seen today in the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris . In 1742, another Frenchman, Father Coeurdoux, also supplied details of the chintz making process, while he
6480-637: Was trying to convert the Indians to Catholicism . In 1759 the ban on chintz was lifted. By this time French and English mills were able to produce chintz. Europeans at first produced reproductions of Indian designs, and later added original patterns. A well-known make was toile de Jouy , which was manufactured in Jouy-en-Josas , France , between 1700 and 1843. Eventually the word in English came to describe any industrially printed cotton. Modern chintz usually consists of bright overall floral patterns printed on
6561-510: Was unable to take Akershus Fortress . After a brief occupation, Charles retraced his steps to the Norwegian fortresses in southeastern Norway with the objective of capturing Frederiksten. This would remove the threat at his back, and the fortifications could serve as the base for a renewed offensive later that year. Capturing the harbours at the mouth of the Glomma river would also allow him to land
#112887