
East India Company: The World's First Corporate Takeover (And How They Got Away With It)
On December 31st, 1600, Queen Elizabeth I signed a charter. What she created wasn't a trading company. It was the world's first corporate empire — and everything that followed was a hostile takeover disguised as commerce. This is the history of the East India Company and the Dutch East India Company (VOC) — two corporations that rewrote the history of India, the British Empire, and modern finance in a single century. This isn't the version they taught you in school. This is how it actually worked. This is Episode 1 of Corporate Empires — the investigative documentary series that tracks how corporations became more powerful than the nations that chartered them. What You'll Discover: ➤ The Charter That Transferred Sovereign Power — How a single royal document gave private merchants the right to wage war, sign treaties, and govern millions ➤ The VOC's Hidden Weapon — The Dutch East India Company invented the permanent share and created the Amsterdam Stock Exchange — the template for all modern corporate finance ➤ The Army Behind the Balance Sheet — How the British East India Company maintained 150,000 soldiers — more than the British Army itself — as an enforcement mechanism for profit ➤ The Bengal Playbook — How Robert Clive didn't win the Battle of Plassey through superior force. He bought it. Bribed Mir Jafar. And turned a battle into a corporate acquisition of 40 million people ➤ State-Backed Narco Trafficking — How Britain's addiction to Chinese tea created a silver crisis — and how the East India Company solved it by flooding China with Bengali opium, triggering the First Opium War ➤ The Corruption Engine — Why corruption wasn't a flaw in the British Empire's corporate system. It was the system. Underpaid employees, private trade, and rotten boroughs in Parliament were features, not bugs ➤ The Enduring Playbook — From United Fruit to IMF structural adjustment programs, the East India Company's methods didn't die in 1874. They evolved. The East India Company didn't colonize India. That word is too small. They executed the world's first hostile corporate takeover of a sovereign nation — and they wrote the playbook that corporations still use today. The history of the British Empire is inseparable from the history of corporate greed at a civilizational scale. This is that story. Same forces. Different century.
CYOL with Jeremy Ryan Slate Archive 1
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (feeds.podetize.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
On December 31st, 1600, Queen Elizabeth I signed a charter. What she created wasn't a trading company. It was the world's first corporate empire — and everything that followed was a hostile takeover disguised as commerce.
This is the history of the East India Company and the Dutch East India Company (VOC) — two corporations that rewrote the history of India, the British Empire, and modern finance in a single century. This isn't the version they taught you in school. This is how it actually worked.
This is Episode 1 of Corporate Empires — the investigative documentary series that tracks how corporations became more powerful than the nations that chartered them.
What You'll Discover:
➤ The Charter That Transferred Sovereign Power — How a single royal document gave private merchants the right to wage war, sign treaties, and govern millions
➤ The VOC's Hidden Weapon — The Dutch East India Company invented the permanent share and created the Amsterdam Stock Exchange — the template for all modern corporate finance
➤ The Army Behind the Balance Sheet — How the British East India Company maintained 150,000 soldiers — more than the British Army itself — as an enforcement mechanism for profit
➤ The Bengal Playbook — How Robert Clive didn't win the Battle of Plassey through superior force. He bought it. Bribed Mir Jafar. And turned a battle into a corporate acquisition of 40 million people
➤ State-Backed Narco Trafficking — How Britain's addiction to Chinese tea created a silver crisis — and how the East India Company solved it by flooding China with Bengali opium, triggering the First Opium War
➤ The Corruption Engine — Why corruption wasn't a flaw in the British Empire's corporate system. It was the system. Underpaid employees, private trade, and rotten boroughs in Parliament were features, not bugs
➤ The Enduring Playbook — From United Fruit to IMF structural adjustment programs, the East India Company's methods didn't die in 1874. They evolved.
The East India Company didn't colonize India. That word is too small. They executed the world's first hostile corporate takeover of a sovereign nation — and they wrote the playbook that corporations still use today.
The history of the British Empire is inseparable from the history of corporate greed at a civilizational scale. This is that story.
Same forces. Different century.