Mangalore`s contract was signed on 11 March 1784 between Tipu Sultan and the British East India Company. It was signed in Mangalore and ended the Second Anglo-Mysore War. Article 8.— The Nabob Tippoo Sultan Bahadur herein renews and confirms all the commercial privileges and immunities granted to the English by the late Nabob Hyder Ali Cawn Bahadur, who is in heaven, and which are particularly specified and specified in the contract between the company, and the nabob in question concluded on 8 August 1770. In 1792, when Tipu Sultan lost the third Anglo-Mysore War under allied forces, the former Mysore region had no newspaper to talk about it. But, thousands of miles away, readers of The Mail, based in Philadelphia; or Claypooles Daily Advertiser read the details of the war and the contract that was signed later. War broke out in late 1789 when Tipu Sultan, the ruler of the kingdom of Mysore, attacked Travancore, an ally of the British East India Company. After a little more than two years of fighting, the company`s troops besieged under the leadership of Lord Charles, 2nd Earl Cornwallis, with Allied troops from the Maratha Empire and Hyderabad in February 1792, the capital of Mysore Seringapatam (also known as Srirangapatinam). [1] Instead of trying to storm the works at great expense to all parties, Cornwalli began negotiating with Tipu to end the conflict. The resulting contract was signed on March 18. Article 10.– This treaty is signed and sealed by the English Commissioners, and a copy of it is then signed and sealed by the President and the Special Committee of Fort St George and returned to Nabob Tippoo Sultan Bahadur within a month or if possible, and the same is recognized under the hands and seals of the Governor General and the Bengal Council.

, and the Governor-Select Committee of Bombay, considered mandatory for all governments in India, and copies of the treaty, thus recognized, will be sent to the nabob in question in three months or earlier, if possible. According to him, the cheque is important for three reasons: it is the second oldest bank cheque; It is signed by Hastings; And $30 was a princely sum at the time. The September 8, 1792 issue of The Mail… Contains details of the interim agreement between Tipu and Allied Commander Lord Cornwallis. The war ended on February 6, 1792 and the treaty was signed on February 22, 1792. It was reported to the London Gazette in the July 5 edition. In the testimony, the aforementioned parts signed, sealed and interchangeable two instruments of the same tenor and date, wit, the three commissioners on behalf of the Honourable English East India Company, and the Carnatic Payen Ghaut, and who declared Nabob Tippoo Sultan Bahadur in his own name, and the reigns of Seringapatam and Hyder Nagur. Thus executed in Mangalore (also called Cordial Bunder) in this March 11 – year 1784, the Christian era – 16th day of the moon Rabillasany in 1198.