The Company’s monopoly over trade in India ended except the trade with China and the trade-in tea.
The constitutional position of the British territories in India was defined explicitly for the first time.
Powers of the Board of Control were further enlarged.
A sum of one lakh rupees was to be set aside for the revival, promotion, and encouragement of literature, learning, and science among the natives of India, every year.
The regulations made by the Councils of Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta were now required to be laid before the British Parliament.
Christian missionaries were also permitted to come to India and preach their religion.
The Charter Act of 1813