Pirates of The Caribbean
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Aha totally forgot about these!
I have nothing fictional, just a recommendation for an excellent podcast about it called "Empire"
Yeah, I've just got the book "Enemy of All Mankind" which is about the period of time when the East India Co. was just getting going. Apparently that time intersects with three big shifts: the first international pirate manhunts, the start of the British Empire, and the creation of the corporation. It tells a crazy story and I absolutely loved it
Awesome, thanks much! Like to have some interesting audio series too so thats perfect!
Dan Snow did a short historical thing on it as well.
Less historical, more ”whatever”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautilus_(TV_series)
Thanks, that sounds amazing!
Hmmm... "A Passage to India" takes place during the Raj (which is when the Crown took over from the East India Company) but a lot of the attitudes and issues are the same
- IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087892/
- the novel on Gutenberg: https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/61221
Similarly, "Conduct Unbecoming" takes place right after the Crown takeover. But hey, it's free on youtube:
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gzE8HkRrz0
- description: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conduct_Unbecoming_(1975_film)
Finally, you could look here:
For the Raj period, there's also The Jewel in the Crown. For the Company Rule period, there's Beecham House.
Behind the Bastards podcast does shows on both, i believe.
Beecham House. Its set in India during the 1790s.
It's a book series and it's not about the East India Company per se, though they make frequent appearances, but the Aubrey/Maturin books by Patrick O'Brien are incredibly good. The first one is called Master & Commander which inspired the Russell Crowe movie of the same name.
Try the history section of your library for audiobooks and printed books. I read one about Tea which was fascinating about how the East India company stole Tea plants from China and tried to grow them in India, but they came out black, which gave us English Black Tea.
If not for the EIC then watch it for a superb Tom Hardy.