Danish East India Company


The Danish East Indies Company (Dansk Ostindisk Kompagni) was founded in 1616 on the basis of the Danish King Christian IV privilege. It focused on trade with India, China and Japan. She was in Tranguebar.

The campaign was a joint stock company: the king paid 12% of the capital, 15% of the nobility, and the townspeople were 53% - so the townspeople were mainly the Campania shareholders.

After its initial success, it quickly lost its importance, and in 1729 it was dissolved. In 1732 she was re-named as the Asian Company, but in 1772 she lost her monopoly on trade with India. At the best of times, with the Swedish East India Company, she imported more tea to Europe than the British East India Company and smuggled 90% into England where she sold it with great profit.

During the Napoleonic Wars, in 1801, and again in 1807, the British fleet attacked Copenhagen. In battle, the city of Denmark lost its entire fleet and the island of Helgoland. The British control of the sea lanes caused the annihilation of the Danish East India Company.

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