How the Jagat Seths Bankrolled an Empire and Then Watched It Crumble
When Ledgers Topple Thrones: The Rise and Fall of the Rothschilds of India In the 18th century, a family of Jain bankers from Rajasthan built a financial empire so vast that their personal wealth reportedly exceeded the entire British economy. The Jagat Seths—meaning "Bankers of the World"—functioned as the living heartbeat of the Mughal Empire, moving revenues across 1,200 miles without shipping a single coin, controlling the imperial mint, and deciding which Nawabs would live and which would die. Yet within seven years of their greatest triumph—orchestrating the overthrow of Bengal's ruler at the Battle of Plassey—the dynasty lay shattered. Their executioners were not foreign invaders but the very British clients they had helped empower. This is the story of how an invisible grid of credit, trust, and information proved more powerful than armies, and how extreme specialization became the gravest vulnerability when the rules of the game changed overnight. ...