byname of UNITED
EAST INDIA COMPANY, Dutch VEREENIGDE OOST-INDISCHE COMPAGNIE,
trading company founded by the Dutch in 1602 to protect their trade in the Indian Ocean
and to assist in their war of independence from Spain. The company prospered through most
of the 17th century as the instrument of the powerful Dutch commercial empire in the
East Indies. It was dissolved in 1799.The Dutch government granted the
company a trade monopoly in the waters between the Cape of Good Hope and the Straits of
Magellan with the right to conclude treaties with native princes, to build forts and
maintain armed forces, and to carry on administrative functions through officials who were
required to take an oath of loyalty to the Dutch government. Under the administration of
forceful governors-general, most notably Jan Pieterszoon Coen (1618-23) and Anthony van
Diemen (1636-45), the company was able to defeat the British fleet and largely displace
the Portuguese in the East Indies.
In 1619 the
company renamed Jacatra Batavia (now Jakarta) and used it as a base to conquer Java and
the outer islands. By the late 17th century the company had declined as a trading and sea
power and had become more and more involved in the affairs of Java. By the 18th century
the company had changed from a commercial-shipping enterprise to a loose territorial
organization interested in the agricultural produce of the Indonesian archipelago. Toward
the end of the 18th century the company became corrupt and seriously in debt. The Dutch
government eventually revoked the company's charter and took over its debts and
possessions in 1799. |