The East India Company is the clearest answer history offers to the question of how powerful a corporation can become. Chartered in 1600 to trade for spices and textiles, it spent two centuries acquiring something no company has held before or since: a subcontinent. By the early 1800s it governed roughly 200 million people across India and maintained a private army of about 260,000 soldiers — roughly twice the size of the standing British Army — collecting taxes, fighting wars, and administering justice over a fifth of humanity.
It overreached. Its rule was extractive and brutal, and in 1857 a vast rebellion swept northern India. The British government, alarmed that a commercial company held this much power, used the uprising as the moment to seize control: the Crown took over direct rule in 1858, and the Company was formally wound up in 1874. The most powerful corporation in history did not go bankrupt or get out-competed — it was nationalized out of existence by its own state.
Worth remembering
- It gave the English language the word 'loot' (from Hindi), made tea the national drink of Britain, and — through its tea monopoly — provoked the Boston Tea Party.
- It minted its own money, ran its own courts, and at its height fielded a private army roughly twice the size of Britain's.
Sources
- EIC chartered 1600; governed much of India with a private army; nationalized after 1857 and dissolved 1874 Wikipedia
- History of the East India Company and the transfer of power to the Crown Encyclopaedia Britannica
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