Bankipur (Bengal)

[1] Bankipur was famous as the principal settlement of the Ostend Company, the one great effort made by the Austrian Empire to secure a foothold in India.

The Ostend Company was formed in 1722–1723, and with a capital of less than a million sterling founded two settlements, one at Coblom (Covelong) on the Madras coast between the British company at Madras and the Dutch one at Sadras, and the other on the Hugli between the British company at Calcutta and the Dutch Chinsura.

Both the British and Dutch were offended and in 1727, in order to obtain the European guarantee for the Pragmatic Sanction, the court of Vienna resolved to sacrifice the Company and suspended its charter.

But in the meantime in 1733 the British and Dutch convinced the Mughal general at Hugli to attack Bankipur.

He attacked Bankipur and the garrison of only fourteen soldiers escaped and set sail for Europe.

Map of "Banquibazar" and "Hydſapour" by the Ganges . 1764 copy of the original drawing ( c. 1730 )
The location of the European factories along the Hooghly in 1749. Isapor ou Banquibazar is opposing French Goretty and Danish Serampor .
Palace of the governor of Banquibazar in the 1720s
Divisions of West Bengal