Historical Fragments of the Mogul Empire

Robert Orme

Robert Orme's "Historical Fragments of the Mogul Empire" represents a critical scholarly intervention in understanding the transitional period of Indian political history during the mid-18th century, a time of profound geopolitical reconfiguration characterized by the gradual decline of Mughal imperial power and the strategic ascendancy of European colonial interests. Compiled from privileged East India Company archives and firsthand observations, the work meticulously documents the complex interactions between Mughal administrative fragmentation, Maratha territorial expansionism, and emerging British imperial strategies. Orme, who served as the Company's official historian from 1743 to 1763, leveraged his unique institutional access to construct a nuanced narrative that goes beyond conventional colonial historiography, offering detailed analyses of critical political and military encounters along the western Indian seaboard, particularly around the strategic maritime hub of Surat. The text provides extensive documentation of diplomatic negotiations, military campaigns, trade disputes, and territorial transitions, presenting a granular account of the intricate power dynamics that defined India's political landscape during a transformative epoch. Orme's scholarly approach is particularly significant for contemporary Indian historical studies, as it offers an insider's perspective on the mechanisms of colonial knowledge production, imperial expansion, and the reconfiguration of indigenous political structures. By assembling fragmented historical accounts and official correspondence, the work serves as a crucial archival resource for understanding the complex intercultural negotiations and power transitions that characterized the late Mughal and early colonial periods in the Indian subcontinent.

English · 1805 · History, Political History

Historical Fragments of the Mogul Empire

Overview

Historical Fragments expands on Robert Orme’s official histories with closely observed narratives of the Mughal decline and the rise of regional powers in India. Drawing on Company correspondence and eyewitness testimony, Orme recounts sieges, treaties, and the mercantile ambitions that set British fortunes against established South Asian sovereignties.

Highlights

The volume offers granular detail on the English settlements at Surat and Broach, the strategic calculations of the Marathas, and the administrative structures the Company encountered while extending inland from coastal trading posts. Appendices reproduce key documents, giving readers access to the voices of imperial officials and Indian rulers alike.

Access Notes

The Internet Archive scan provides searchable text, high-quality PDF downloads, and a navigable table of contents, allowing historians to trace individual campaigns or track the vocabulary of early Company bureaucracy.