The Company Fortress

Military Engineering and the Dutch East India Company in South Asia, 1638-1795

Odegard

About this book

The remains of Dutch East India Company forts are scattered throughout littoral Asia and Africa. But how important were the specific characteristics of European bastion-trace fortifications to early modern European expansion? The Company Fortress takes on this question by studying the system of fortifications built and maintained by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) in present-day India and Sri Lanka. It uncovers the stories of the forts and their designers, arguing that many of these engineers were in fact amateurs and their creations contained serious flaws. Subsequent engineers were hampered by their disagreement over fortification design: there proved not to be a single ‘European school’ of fortification design. The study questions the importance of fortification design for European expansion, shows the relationship between siege and naval warfare, and highlights changing perceptions by the VOC of the capabilities of new polities in India in the late eighteenth century.

Erik Odegard wrote in Leiden his PhD on Dutch colonial governors in the seventeenth century. He has published on shipbuilding, agency problems, naval warfare and the Dutch chartered companies. Currently, he works at the Mauritshuis museum as head of the research project ‘Revisiting Dutch Brazil and Johan Maurits’.

 

Format: Paperback

Pages: 308

Illustrated: Yes

ISBN Print: 9789087283469

ISBN ePUB: 9789400603813

ISBN ePDF: 9789400603806

Published: 16 November 2020

Language: English

Keywords: ,

Category: ,

Price 66.00

Reviews

David Parrott, Professor of Early Modern History at New College, University of Oxford
“…the best and fullest available guide to the evolution of fortification technology from the first bastions through into the eighteenth-century. “
David Parrott, Professor of Early Modern History at New College, University of Oxford
“…the best and fullest available guide to the evolution of fortification technology from the first bastions through into the eighteenth-century. “

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