
Danish and other European settlements in India.
The 'Danish East India Company' (
Danish: ''Dansk Ostindisk Kompagni'') was a Danish
chartered company.
History

Chrisitan IV of Denmark and Norway.
It was founded in
1616, following a privilege of
Danish King
Christian IV.
It was focused on trade with
India and had its base in
Trankebar, in the fort Dansborg, the seat of its governor (see
indirect rule) of
Danish India, who was styled
Opperhoved. During its heyday, the Danish East India Company and
Swedish East India Company imported more tea than the
British East India Company and smuggled 90 percent of it into
Britain, where it could be sold at a huge profit.
After a short blossoming, it lost importance quickly and was dissolved in 1729. In 1732, it was refounded as '''Asiatisk Kompagni''' ("Asiatic Company"), yet in 1772 it lost its monopoly, and in 1779 Danish India became a
crown colony.
During the
Napoleonic Wars, in 1801 and again in 1807, the British Navy attacked Copenhagen in the
Battle of Copenhagen (1807). As a consequence of the last attack, Denmark (one of few West European countries not occupied by Bonaparte) lost its entire fleet and the island of
Helgoland (part of the duchy of
Holstein-Gottorp; ceded to Germany in 1890). Denmark sold its colonies in India and the Gold Coast to Britain in 1845.
See also
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Tranquebar
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Serampore
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Dansborg
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Frederiksnagore
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Nicobar Islands
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History of India
Sources and References
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Runeberg.org Danish biographical lexicon, in Danish
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The Danish East India Company
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Denmark during the Age of the French Revolution, 1790-1814
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WorldStatesmen- India; see also Germany for Helgoland