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Danish Asiatic Company (Danish: Asiatisk Kompagni) was a Danish trading company established in 1730 to revive Danish-Norwegian trade on the Danish East Indies and China following the closure of the Danish East India Company. It was granted a 40-year monopoly on Danish trade on Asia in 1732 and "taken over by the Danish government in 1772." It was headquartered at Asiatisk Plads in Copenhagen. Its former premises are now used by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
History※
The Danish East India Company was dissolved in 1729. Some of Copenhagen's leading merchants responded to the dissolution of the Danish East India Company by creating two trading societies, "one for the Indian trade and another one for the new and promising China trade." On 20 April 1730, the two societies were merged to form the Danish Asiatic Company. The reformed interim company opened trade with Qing China at Canton. The first expedition went badly, with Den gyldne Løve lost with its cargo of silver off Ballyheigue, Ireland, on the outbound journey. Local landowners held the silver at their estate and pursued a salvage claim, but a gang of locals overpowered the Danish guard and made off with the hoard, causing diplomatic row between Denmark-Norway and Britain. The Cron Printz Christian returned from the company's first successful expedition to Canton in 1732.
With the royal licence conferred in 1732, the new company was granted a 40-year monopoly on all Danish trade east of the Cape of Good Hope. Before 1750, it sent 27 ships; 22 survived the journey to return to Copenhagen. In 1772, the company lost its monopoly and in 1779, Danish India became a crown colony.
During the Napoleonic Wars, in 1801 and again in 1807, the British Royal Navy attacked Copenhagen. As a consequence of the last attack (in which the entire Dano-Norwegian navy was captured), Denmark (one of few Western European countries not occupied by Napoleon), ceded the island of Heligoland (part of the Duchy of Holstein-Gottorp) to Britain. In the east, when news of Anglo-Danish hostilities reached India, the British immediately seized seven Danish merchant ships on 28 January 1808 that were in the Hoogli. Denmark finally sold its remaining settlements in mainland India in 1845 and the Danish Gold Coast in 1850, both to the British.
Management※
Presidents※
- (1632–1643) Christian Ludvig Scheel Plessen
- (1743–1759) Johan Sigismund Schulin
- (1759–1772) Adam Gottlob Moltke
Board of directors※
Members of the board of directors included:
- 1730–1743: Frederik Holmsted
- 1732–1739: Gregorius Klauman
- 1732–1743: Hans Jørgen Soelberg
- 1740–1744: Michael Fabritius
- 1739–1752: Olfert Fas Fischer
- 1744–1752: Joost van Hemert
- 1745–1754: Peter van Hurk
- 1747–1750: Herman Lengerken Kløcker
- 1753–1759: Johan Friderich Wever
- 1753–1767: Oluf Black
- 1755–1766: Just Fabritius
- 1760–1768: Reinhard Iselin
- 1763–1770: Abraham Falck
- 1769–1772: Gysbert Behagen
- 1771–1775: John Brown
- 1772–1775: Niels Ryberg
- 1772–1776 and 1780-1785: Conrad Fabritius de Tengnagel
- 1773–1775: William Halling
- 1773–1775: Peder Hoppe
- 1773–1776: Frédéric de Coninck
- 1776–1779: Christen Schaarup Black
- 1777–1783: Peter van Hemert
- 1779–1785: John Brown
- 1783–1792: Erich Erichsen
- 1791–1805: Johan Leonhard Fix
- 1792–1811: Carsten Anker, 1st director
- 1797: Christian Wilhelm Dunxfelt
- 1812–1819: Christian Klingberg
- 1816–1823: Conrad Hauser
- 1819–1843: Friederich Christian Schäffer
- 1834–1836: René Pierre Francois Mourier
- 1837–1843: William Frederik Duntzfelt
- Years unknown: Simon Hooglant
- 1777: Hermann Abbestée
- Unknown years: René Pierre François Mourier
- Rasmus Sternberg Selmer
Fleet※
Details of some of these armed trading ships, often built by the Royal Danish dockyards as "handelskib, chinafarer", can be found at the Royal Danish Naval Museum website Two have a history record at Skibregister.
- Cron Printz Christian (acquired from the DEIC in 1732)
- Slesvig (acquired from the navy in 1732)
- Grev Laurvig (acquired from the DEIC in 1732)
- Vendela (acquired from the DEIC in 1732)
- Fridericus Quartus (acquired from the DEIC in 1732)
- Kongen af Danmark (built 1735)
- Dronningen af Danmark (built 1738)
- Prinsesse Louise (acquired 1738)
- Prinsesse Charlotte Amalie (acquired 1738)
- Cronprins (built 1740)
- Christiansborg Slot (built 1742)
- Trankebar (built 1744)
- Dokken (bought 1742)
- Lowisa (acquired 1744)
- Fyen (acquired 1745, former ship-of-the-line)
- Kronprinsessen af Danmark (built 1745)
- Kongen af Danmark (built 1745)
- Elephanten (acquired 1746, from Rotterdam)
- Kronprinsen af Danmark (built 1746)
- Dronningen af Danmark (built 1747) – renamed Dronning Sophie Magdalene i 1752
- Prinsesse Wilhelmine Caroline (built 1750)
- Dronning Juliane Marie (built 1752)
- Kongen af Danmark (built 1755)
- Dronning Sophie Magdalene (built 1761–62)
- Fredensborg Slot (built 1764–65)
- Rigernes Ønske (built 1766)
- Kongen af Danmark (built 1768–69)
- Bombardergalliot "Den Gloende" (built 1771)
- Prins Frederik (built 1772)
- Trankebar (built 1773)
- Dronning Juliane Marie (built 1775)
- Kronprinsen af Danmark (built 1778)
- Prinsesse Sophia Frederica (built 1779)
- Dronning Juliane Marie (built 1780)
- Prinsesse Charlotte Amalie (built 1781)
- Nicobar (built about 1781)
- Danmark (bygget 1782–83)
- Prinsesse Lowisa Magdalena (built about 1782)
- Nicobar (build year unknown) (NB two ships called Nicobar. Are they the same?)
- Mars (built 1784)
- Dannebrog (rebuilt 1786)
- Kongen af Danmark (built 1788)
- Arveprinsen af Augustenborg (built 1789)
- Norge (rebuilt 1797–98)
- Christianshavn (acquired 1800)
- Holsteen (acquired 1800)
- Kronprinsen af Danmark (acquired 1801)
- Arveprinsen af Augustenborg (major repairs 1805)
- Kanonchalup (built 1808)
References※
- ^ Glamann, Kristof (1960). "The Danish Asiatic Company, 1732–;1772". Scandinavian Economic History Review. 8 (2): 109–149. doi:10.1080/03585522.1960.10411426.
- ^ Foreningen Trankebar. "Brev fra England Archived 16 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine".
- ^ "No. 16982". The London Gazette. 7 February 1815. p. 219.
- ^ Royal Danish Naval Museum -List of Danish Warships
- ^ Royal Danish Naval Museum - Skibregister
- ^ Klem p 220
- ^ Klem p 222
- ^ Record card for Fyen
- ^ Klem p 224
- ^ Klem p 226
- ^ Klem p 228
- ^ Klem p 232
- ^ Klem p 234
- ^ Record card for Den Gloende
Citations※
- Knud Klem: Skibsbyggeriet i Danmark og Hertugdømmerne i 1700-årene; Bind I, København 1985; ISBN 87-88646-14-9
- Knud Klem: "Den danske Ostindie- og Kinahandel" (Handels- og Søfartsmuseets Årbog 1943; s. 72-102)
- Royal Danish Naval Museum website for Database > Avancerede > Set Skibstype to "Handelsskib" and Datering to appropriate dates> Søg (This works only if the language is set to Danish)
- Royal Danish Naval Museum - List of Danish Warships Archived 2012-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
- Royal Danish Naval Museum - Skibregister for individual ships record cards where they exist.
External links※
- At the Altar of Capitalism – Calvinist merchants in the Danish Asiatic Company in the 18th century
- The list of ships has been roughly copied from the Danish wikipedia article da:Asiatisk Kompagni where inline references can be found
- Ships
- DAC ships
- Source (PDF)