Page:Hobson-Jobson a glossary of colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases, and of kindred terms, etymological, historical, geographical and discursive.djvu/398

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FACTORY.
346
FACTORY.

1689.—"These are the chief Places of Note and Trade where their Presidents and Agents reside, for the support of whom, with their Writers and Factors, large Privileges and Salaries are allowed."—Ovington, 386. (The same writer tells us that Factors got £40 a year; junior Factors, £15; Writers, £7. Peons got 4 rupees a month. P. 392.)

1711.—Lockyer gives the salaries at Madras as follows: "The Governor, £200 and £100 gratuity; 6 Councillors, of whom the chief (2nd?) had £100, 3d. £70, 4th. £50, the others £40, which was the salary of 6 Senior Merchants. 2 Junior Merchants £30 per annum; 5 Factors, £15; 10 Writers, £5; 2 Ministers, £100; 1 Surgeon, £36.

*      *      *      *      *      *      *      *     

"Attorney-General has 50 Pagodas per Annum gratuity.

"Scavenger 100 do."

*      *      *      *      *      *      *      *     

(p. 14.)

c. 1748.—"He was appointed to be a Writer in the Company's Civil Service, becoming ... after the first five (years) a factor."—Orme, Fragments, viii.

1781.—"Why we should have a Council and Senior and Junior Merchants, factors and writers, to load one ship in the year (at Penang), and to collect a very small revenue, appears to me perfectly incomprehensible."—Corresp. of Ld. Cornwallis, i. 390.

1786.—In a notification of Aug. 10th, the subsistence of civil servants out of employ is fixed thus:—


A Senior Merchant £400 sterling per ann.
A Junior Merchant £300 " "
Factors and Writers £200 " "
In Seton-Karr, i. 131.


FACTORY, s. A trading establishment at a foreign port or mart (see preceding).

1500.—"And then he sent ashore the Factor Ayres Correa with the ship's carpenters ... and sent to ask the King for timber ... all which the King sent in great sufficiency, and he sent orders also for him to have many carpenters and labourers to assist in making the houses; and they brought much plank and wood, and palm-trees which they cut down at the Point, so that they made a great Campo,[1] in which they made houses for the Captain Mór, and for each of the Captains, and houses for the people, and they made also a separate large house for the factory (feitoria)."—Correa, i. 168.

1582.—"... he sent a Nayre ... to the intent hee might remaine in the Factorye."—Castañeda (by N. L.), ff. 54b.

1606.—"In which time the Portingall and Tydoryan Slaves had sacked the towne, setting fire to the factory."—Middleton's Voyage, G. (4).

1615.—"The King of Acheen desiring that the Hector should leave a merchant in his country ... it has been thought fit to settle a factory at Acheen, and leave Juxon and Nicolls in charge of it."—Sainsbury, i. 415.

1809.—"The factory-house (at Cuddalore) is a chaste piece of architecture, built by my relative Diamond Pitt, when this was the chief station of the British on the Coromandel Coast."—Ld. Valentia, i. 372.

We add a list of the Factories established by the E. I. Company, as complete as we have been able to compile. We have used Milburn, Sainsbury, the "Charters of the E. I. Company," and "Robert Burton, The English Acquisitions in Guinea and East India, 1728," which contains (p. 184) a long list of English Factories. It has not been possible to submit our list as yet to proper criticism. The letters attached indicate the authorities, viz. M. Milburn, S. Sainsbury, C. Charters, B. Burton. [For a list of the Hollanders' Factories in 1613 see Danvers, Letters, i. 309.]


In Arabia, the Gulf, and Persia.
Judda, B.
Mocha, M.
Aden, M.
Shahr, B.
Durga (?), B.
Dofar, B.
Maculla, B.
Muscat, B.
Kishm, B.
Bushire, M.
Gombroon, C.
Bussorah, M.
Shiraz, C.
Ispahan, C.
In Sind.—Tatta (?).
In Western India.
Cutch, M.
Cambay, M.
Brodera (Baroda), M.
Broach, C.
Ahmedabad, C.
Surat and Swally, C.
Bombay, C.
Raybag (?), M.
Rajapore, M.
Carwar, C.
Batikala, M.
Honore, M.
Barcelore, M.
Mangalore, M.
Cananore, M.
Dhurmapatam, M.
Tellecherry, C.
Calicut, C.
Cranganore, M.
Cochin, M.
Porca, M.
Carnoply, M.
Quilon, M.
Anjengo, C.
Eastern and Coromandel Coast.
Tuticorin, M.
Callimere, B.
Porto Novo, C.
Cuddalore (Ft. St. David), C.
(qy. Sadras?)
Fort St. George, C., M.
Pulicat, M.
Pettipoli, C., S.
Masulipatam, C., S.
Madapollam, C.
Verasheron (?), M.
Ingeram (?), M.
Vizagapatam, C.
Bimlipatam, M.
Ganjam, M.
Manickpatam, B.
Arzapore (?), B.
Bengal Side.
Balasore, C. (and Jelasore?)
Calcutta (Ft. William and
Chuttanuttee, C.)
Hoogly, C.
Cossimbazar, C.
Rajmahal, C.
Malda, C.
Berhampore, M.
Patna, C.
Lucknow, C.
Agra, C.
Lahore, M.
Dācca, C.
Chittagong?
  1. This use of campo is more like the sense of Compound (q.v.) than in any instance we had found when completing that article.