The British East India Company has a…
1756 CE
The British East India Company has a strong presence in India with the three main stations of Fort St. George in Madras, Fort William in Calcutta and Bombay Castle in western India.
These stations are independent presidencies governed by a president and a council, appointed by the Court of Directors in England.
The British have adopted a policy of allying themselves with various princes and Nawabs, promising security against usurpers and rebels.
The Nawabs often gave them concessions in return for the security.
By this time, all rivalry has ceased between the British East India Company and the Dutch or Portuguese.
The French had also established an East India Company under Louis XIV and have two important stations in India—Chandernagar in Bengal and Pondicherry on the Carnatic coast, both governed by the presidency of Pondicherry.
The French had been a late comer in India trade, but they had quickly established themselves in India and are poised to overtake Britain for control.
The War of the Austrian Succession, from 1740 to 1748, had marked the beginning of the power struggle between Britain and France and of European military ascendancy and political intervention in the Indian subcontinent.
The outbreak in 1756 of the Seven Years' War in Europe results in renewed conflict between French and British forces in India.