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Description
A private company raised armies, minted coins, and built an empire-proof that profit could conquer where kings could not. Before nations conquered continents, a company did. Chartered in 1600 by Queen Elizabeth I, the East India Company began as a trading venture and evolved into the most powerful commercial enterprise in history-commanding armies, minting coins, and toppling kingdoms in pursuit of profit. It was a corporation that ruled more subjects than any European monarchy, a private empire that blurred the line between commerce and conquest.This book recounts how a small group of merchants turned trade into territorial domination, reshaping the political geography of Asia and laying the foundations for Britain's global empire. Drawing on company records, Indian archives, and parliamentary debates, it examines the Company's dual identity-as merchant and sovereign-and the mechanisms through which capital became a tool of colonization.From the Bengal Famine to the 1857 Rebellion, the narrative traces how corporate ambition and imperial ideology intertwined, leaving a legacy of extraction, resistance, and reform that continues to haunt postcolonial economies today. More than a story of empire, it is a warning about what happens when private interests wield public power without accountability. Author of English-language books spanning personal evolution, business innovation, and historical perspectives. Adrian synthesizes lessons across time to spark breakthroughs in readers' lives.



