The East India Company is led by…
June 1609 CE
The East India Company is led by one Governor and twenty-four directors who make up the Court of Directors.
They are appointed by, and report to, the Court of Proprietors.
The Court of Directors has ten committees reporting to it.
The high profits reported by the Company after landing in India (presumably owing to a reduction in overhead costs affected by the transit points), had initially prompted King James I to grant subsidiary licenses to other trading companies in England.
He renews the charter given to the Company in 1609 for an indefinite period, including a clause which specifies that the charter will cease to be in force if the trade turns unprofitable for three consecutive years.
Francis Bacon becomes England’s solicitor-general in 1609, and continues his work in the tradition of the late John Dee, allegedly under the influence of Rosicrucianism.
Bacon downplays magic to please the Catholic-leaning King, emphasizing inductive science.
Puritan influences grow in spite of James.
The King James Bible is issued, providing the basis for the anti-Catholic policy of individual Bible reading and interpretation.
A small Marrano colony founded by Queen Elizabeth is expelled from London in 1609 on charges of Judaizing.
From London, many families will spread to Brazil, where conversos had settled at an early date, and to other colonies of the Americas.