• No results found

Eighteenth-century Gujarat : the dynamics of its political economy, 1750-1800

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Eighteenth-century Gujarat : the dynamics of its political economy, 1750-1800"

Copied!
2
0
0

Bezig met laden.... (Bekijk nu de volledige tekst)

Hele tekst

(1)

Eighteenth-century Gujarat : the dynamics of its political economy, 1750-1800

Nadri, G.A.

Citation

Nadri, G. A. (2007, September 6). Eighteenth-century Gujarat : the dynamics of its political economy, 1750-1800 . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/1887/12306

Version: Not Applicable (or Unknown)

License: Licence agreement concerning inclusion of doctoral thesis in the Institutional Repository of the University of Leiden

Downloaded from: https://hdl.handle.net/1887/12306

Note:

To cite this publication please use the final published version (if applicable).

(2)

List of Tables, Figures and Maps

Tables:

1. Table 2.1 ‘Moorse zeevarende' from Surat 41

2. Table 4.1 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sale and profit at Surat, 1711-93 96

3. Table 5.1 Annual value (in rupees) of the English Company’s procurement of

Gujarat textiles, 1770-97 142

Figures:

4. Figure 4.1 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sales and profits at Surat, 1711-93 96

5. Figure 4.2 Comparative average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sales and profits in the four time slots 97

6. Figure 4.3 Five-yearly average annual imports (in Dutch pounds) of cloves

and nutmeg into Surat by the Dutch Company, 1711-91 99 7. Figure 4.4 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sale and profit on cloves at Surat, 1711-91 100 8. Figure 4.5 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sale and profit on nutmeg at Surat, 1711-91 101 9. Figure 4.6 Average annual value of the Company’s import and sale of pepper

at Surat, 1702-51 105

10. Figure 4.7 Five-yearly average annual sale (in Dutch pounds) of copper by the

Dutch Company at Surat, 1702-92 107

11. Figure 4.8 Average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s import, sale

and profit on copper at Surat, 1702-91 108

12. Figure 4.9 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sales and profits on copper at Surat, 1711-92 109 13. Figure 4.10 Five-yearly average annual sale of sugar (in Dutch pounds) by the

Dutch Company at Surat, 1702-92 113

14. Figure 4.11 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

imports, sale, and profit on sugar at Surat, 1702-92 113 15. Figure 4.12 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

exports from Gujarat, 1751-92 117

16. Figure 4.13 Five-yearly average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s

exports from Gujarat, 1672-1792 120

17. Figure 4.14 Average annual value (in guilders) of the Company’s exports from

Gujarat, 1672-1792 120

18. Figure 5.1 Five-yearly average price of cotton (in rupees per candy), 1747-99 145 Maps:

19. Map 1 The India Ocean xiii

20. Map 2 Mughal Gujarat xiv

Referenties

GERELATEERDE DOCUMENTEN

In many ways, they were able to contain the major political powers such as the Mughal governors, the Maratha military leaders or even the English company, in the exercise of

54 That some intermediaries were instrumental in the employment and management of the large labour force required by the European companies in Surat is analogous to the crucial

A number of prominent Parsi and Bania merchants and shipowners remained under the protection of the Dutch Company in the second half of the eighteenth century.. If

In the second half of the eighteenth century, the Company’s sales in Gujarat thrived primarily on three major items namely spices (cloves and nutmeg), Japanese copper, and sugar.

54 The revenue figures for earlier periods refer to the jama and not to the actual collection (hasil); hence it is difficult to identify if there was any improvement in

Contrary to the notion of the state as the motor of economic change in Asia, this study suggests that the role of the state in the political economy of Gujarat was at best confined

Note: In the sources, the prices in the years between 1707 and 1744 are quoted in guilders per pond and for the subsequent years they are given in guilders per 100 ponds. I

—— ‘Restrictive Trading Regimes: VOC and the Asian Spice Trade in the Seventeenth Century’, in Pearson (ed.), Spices in the Indian Ocean World (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1996),