

| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs
|
. | General Stacks | 342.54029 COE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | HB | Available | Recommended by Prof. Dr. Arun K Thiruvengadam | 40089 |
Introduction and Acknowledgements;
Foreword;
Indica, In Memoriam;
Tributes from Institutes, Colleagues and Students;
William Coelho Memorial Appeal;
Chapters:
I. The Political Development of the East India Company 1600-1774:
1. The Sources of the Company's powers;
2. The Administration of Bengal 1765-1774;
II. The First Indian Constitution:
1. Parliamentary Intervention 1765-1773;
2. The Regulating Act 1773;
III. The Working of the Constitution, 1774-1781:
1. The Regulating Act in Operation;
2. The Reforms of 1781;
IV. Parliament's Hostility and Pitt's Compromise, 1782-1784:
1. Parliament's Hostility to the Company;
2. Pitt's India Act, 1784;
V. The Beginning of a Constitutional Government, 1784-1793:
1. Government of India under Cornwallis;
2. Home Government under Dundas;
3. The Consolidating Act, 1793;
Bibliographical Notes.
“The Origin of the Indian Constitution may be traced to the early British Period of Indian History(1600-1793). The Regulating Act of 1773 is usually regarded as the first Constitution in the History of Modern India. On the one hand, the principles of the Constitution were upheld and enforced though imperfectly for the purposes of British administration in India, on the other hand, it was not till the passing of the Charter Act of 1793 that the Foundation of a Constitutional Government was firmly laid. The Constitution, or the rules of government, postulate the authority to govern. This authority comes as a consequence of the acquisition of the territorial sovereignty either by conquest or by grant. But the early history of the East India Company, a private body of merchants, started in 1600 on the authority of a Charter by Queen Elizabeth I, is an exception to the rule in the sense that they received the authority of government before they had a territory to govern. Sufficiently armed with semi-sovereign powers bestowed on them by the Royal Charters of England, these merchants found that their governmental powers could be easily augmented in India either owing to the weakness of the Indian rulers or to the inherent defects of the legal and political systems of the country. Thus with this small beginning the Company succeeded in establishing the largest empire in the history of the world.”