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  1. The three key presidencies in India were the Madras Presidency, the Bengal Presidency, and the Bombay Presidency. Those provinces were centered on the cities of Madras (now Chennai), Calcutta (now Kolkata), and Bombay (now Mumbai), respectively, and each city played a key role in the spread of British trade and commerce in India.

  2. Sep 27, 2007 · Interpretations of eighteenth-century India now stress not political and economic failure uniformly throughout the subcontinent in the wake of the collapse of the Mughal empire, but rather an uneven pattern with areas of prosperity and stable successor states as well as areas of political fragmentation and economic disruption. 1 Bengal was an area of relative economic prosperity and political ...

  3. Bihar and Orissa: separated from Bengal in 1912. Renamed Bihar in 1936 when Orissa became a separate province. Delhi: Separated from Punjab in 1912, when it became the capital of British India. Orissa: Separate province by carving out certain portions from the Bihar-Orissa Province and the Madras Province in 1936.

  4. Bombay in the 1880s. Bombay, also called Bom baim in Portuguese, is the financial and commercial capital of India and one of the most populous cities in the world.. Once an archipelago of seven islands, obtained by the Portuguese via the Treaty of Bassein (1534), from the Sultan Bahadur Shah of Gujarat, the island group would later form part of the dowry of Catherine of Braganza, daughter of ...

  5. Feb 17, 2011 · British involvement in India during the 18th century can be divided into two phases, one ending and the other beginning at mid-century. In the first half of the century, the British were a trading ...

  6. Summary. The origin of British India can be traced to warfare in 18th-century Europe and India, trade-related conflicts and disputes, and the East India Company’s business model. The state that emerged from these roots survived by reforming the institutions of capitalism, military strategy, and political strategy.

  7. In 1756 Siraj ud-Daulah became the Nawab close Nawab A Muslim ruler of Bengal, who was typically loyal to the Mughal Emperor. of Bengal close Bengal An area of South Asia that is today made up of ...

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