'Danish India' is a term for the former colonies of
Denmark in
India.

Danish and other European settlements in India.
They included the town of
Tranquebar in present-day
Tamil Nadu state,
Serampore in present-day
West Bengal, and the
Nicobar Islands, currently part of India's
union territory of the
Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
History
The Danish colonies in India were founded by the
Danish East India Company, which was active from the 17th to the 19th centuries. The Danish colony's capital was Fort Dansborg at Tranquebar, established in
1620, on the
Coromandel coast.
The Danish also established several commercial outposts, governed from Tranquebar:
★
1696 - 1722
Oddeway Torre on the
Malabar coast
★
1698 - 1714
Dannemarksnagore at Gondalpara, southeast of Chandernagore
★
1752 - 1791
Calicut
★ october
1755 Frederiksnagore at Serampore, in present-day
West Bengal.
★
1754/1756 the Nicobar Islands -under the name
Frederiksøerne.
★
1763 Balasore (already occupied 1636-1643).
In
1779 it was turned over to the government by the chartered company and became a Danish crown colony.
In
1789 the
Andaman Islands become a British possession.
During the
Napoleonic Wars, the
British attacked Danish shipping, and devastated the Danish East India Company's India trade; in May 1801 - August 1802 and 1808 - 20 September 1815 the British even occupied Dansborg and Frederiksnagore.
The Danish colonies went into decline, and the British ultimately took possession of them, making them part of
British India: Serampore was sold to the British in
1839, and Tranquebar and most minor settlements in
1845 (11 October 1845 Frederiksnagore sold; 7 November 1845 other continental Danish India settlements sold); on 16 October
1869 all Danish rights to the Nicobar Islands, which since 1848 had been gradually abandoned, were sold to Britain.
Sources and references
(incomplete)
★
WorldStatesmen- India