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Architecture
Trade to Empire – From the East India Company to
Angrez Raj
British Colonial Architecture – 1
by Ashish Nangia
"In the middle of
the seventeenth century, Asia still had a far more important place in the world
than Europe." So wrote J. Pirenne in his 'History of the Universe',
published in Paris in 1950. He added, "The riches of Asia were incomparably
greater than those of the European states. Her industrial techniques showed a
subtlety and a tradition that the European handicrafts did not possess. And
there was nothing in the more modern methods used by the traders of the Western
countries that Asian trade had to envy. In matters of credit, transfer of funds,
insurance, and cartels, neither India, Persia, nor China had anything to learn
from Europe." (Quoted in Auguste Toussaint's 'History of the Indian
Ocean')
The British East
India Company made its presence felt in India in the 17th century, during the
height of power of the Mughal empire. Instead of selling their own goods, the
British eventually found it more profitable to sell Indian goods in Europe. The
early days were hard. There was competition from both other Europeans, as well
as other trade routes (the Red Sea route through Egypt, the Persian Gulf Route
through Iraq, and the Northern Caravan Route through Afghanistan, Persia and
Turkey). Thus the early British Traders were in no position to dictate terms and
trade concessions were hard won. However, eventually and with perseverance the
Company slowly established trading bases wherever it could along either side of
the lengthy Indian coastline.
As the East India
Company slowly changed in character from a purely trading concern to a
political-military-economic machine, it was these trading bases that formed the
nucleus of British settlements and it was here that the first British buildings
came up. In keeping with the nature of the Company, the first buildings were
warehouses, barracks and living quarters, protected by a fort.
The earliest British forts followed Portuguese and French variations of the
Italian Renaissance’s conception of an ideal city and its defenses. In the forts
at Madras and Calcutta, the French military engineer Vauban’s influence is
apparent. Regular polygonal geometry and salient triangular bastions with
recessed flanks at each angle maximized all-round cover and minimized
vulnerability by offering overlapping fields of fire. Ditches and earthworks
between the main ring of bastions and lower, outlying salients increased
defensive capability. The area surrounding the fort was cleared of all obstacles
so as to remove any cover for attackers.
These first forts at Madras, Bombay and Calcutta were the principal seats from
where the Company oversaw its affairs. Features common to them all include
doubled walls and angular bastions for artillery to dominate the approach. The
fortifications also took advantage of natural features like the sea and rivers
for defense.

Plan, Madras City, showing Fort St. George in lower left
Around the forts the first signs of segregation were already apparent – the
European and Indian communities lived in separate settlements with very distinct
characters. In the case of Fort St. George, Madras, the main fortifications
surrounded the warehouses and other military buildings, and the so-called ‘white
town’ had another ring of fortification separating it from the ‘black town’.

Fort St. George, Madras
Bombay’s Fort St. George was finished in 1715. To place this in context, the
Mughal empire was beginning to rapidly come apart with Aurangzeb’s death in
1707.

Fort St. George, Bombay
Although Fort St. George Madras was one of the first British outposts, it fell
to the French in 1745, and again in 1758, before it was finally retaken by the
British. The French were also weakened by their losses in Europe and were slowly
abandoning India to the British.
After the Nawab of Bengal took Calcutta in 1755 and was then defeated by Clive,
a new Fort William was begun by the Company’s chief engineer in Bengal, Captain
John Bohier. On an island site by the river unencumbered by buildings, Fort
William’s field survives as the maidan, emulated at Bombay.

Fort William, Calcutta
In addition to warehouses within the fort walls, there was also the need for
arsenals, barracks and residential accommodation for the British. A church, too,
was a necessity. The first English church in India was thus St. Mary’s at Madras
fort, founded in 1678.

St. Mary's Church, Madras
Early British construction, thus, with the exception of St. Mary’s, was
restricted to military and utilitarian structures, as the Company was still
mostly a trading concern and only interfered in politics where it felt its
commercial interests were in danger. Architecture as a symbol of political power
was to come later, but the fall of the Mughal empire and infighting amongst the
powers that succeeded it was to make it easier for the British to consolidate
their tiny footholds into the beginning of a mighty empire that straddled the
whole subcontinent.
June 5, 2004
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