Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History
The Dutch East India Company, the VOC, was the most valuable corporation in history—richer than any tech giant today. But it didn't fall because of corruption or bad management alone. In this episode, Lucas and Luna unpack the hidden cost of the VOC's success: the Batavia shipwreck, the spice monopoly's unintended consequences, and how the Company's own dividend policy slowly bled it dry. They trace the arc from the 1602 founding through the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War to the final bankruptcy in 1800, showing how a system built on violence and short-term profit eventually strangled itself. Central figures include Jan Pieterszoon Coen, the ruthless governor-general who built Batavia on a massacre; the Heren XVII, the seventeen directors who refused to reinvest; and the forgotten bookkeepers whose ledgers told the real story. Along the way, they explore the Banda Islands genocide, the rise of private trade by VOC employees, and the moment when Britain's Royal Navy sealed the Company's fate. A quiet, sober look at how empires built on paper money and pepper can fade into ash. #VOC #DutchEastIndiaCompany #Batavia #JanPieterszoonCoen #SpiceTrade #BandaIslands #HerenXVII #FourthAngloDutchWar #Amsterdam #Nutmeg #Pepper #Colonialism #Corporation #Bankruptcy #17thCentury #18thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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