Last King in India: Wajid Ali Shah

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Last King in India: Wajid Ali Shah Page 34

by Rosie Llewellyn-Jones


  Brandon, Mary Rose, attendant to queen-mother, 27, 39

  Calcutta; description of, 240; Fort William, 116–117; High Court, 182; Hugli river, 205, 208, 239; Municipal improvements in, 198; Royal Botanic Garden, 205–208, 210; tiger exhibition, 213; theatres in, 241; Zoological Gardens, 214, 215, 217

  Canning, Lord, governor general 17, 24, 192, 248; appointed Viceroy, 123; arrests the king, 116–117; comments on queen-mother, 29; correspondence with Vernon-Smith 24; orders 21 gun salute for king 20; refusal to recognise king’s agent, 18, 29; retires to England, 193; warns king about debts, 170; warns king again 173; writes to king, 121

  Cavenagh, Colonel Orfeur, town major at Calcutta, 116; visits king in jail 118, 120, 122

  Cawnpore, 17, 79, 250, 251

  Chand Mehtab Bahadur, Maharajah of Burdwan, 20, 167

  Chess Players, The (Shatranj ke Khilari), film 255

  Clarendon, Lord, 44

  Clark, Sir George, governor of Bombay, 35, 40

  Colvin, Sir Auckland, 233, 234

  Crimean War, 11, 106

  Currie, Sir Frederick, chairman East India Company, 21, 98

  Dalhousie, Marquess, governor general, 14, 16, 26; annexation ‘a parting coup’ 109; comments on king 101–102; refuses to meet king, 106; takes up office, 82; views on Awadh, 97–98

  Dara Jah, prince, 233–234

  Delhi, king’s property in, 172; National Archives, 9, 245

  Derusett, George Harris (‘Barber of Lucknow’), 27

  Digest of Mohummudan Law, 132, 155

  Diyanat ud-Daulah, eunuch, 76, 90, 120; buys goods for king, 188; death of, 189

  Dufferin, Lord Frederick, governor general 159, 256, 257, 261, 270

  Duke of Wellington Fund, 105–6

  Duleep Singh, deposed maharajah, 11, 39, 251

  Durand, Major General Sir Henry Marion, 174

  Durand, Captain Henry Mortimer, agent to king, 197, 225, 233, 246, 257, 270

  East India Company; annexation policy, 68; charter renewed 1853, 25; Court of Directors, 17, 36, 82, 113, 166; loans from Awadh rulers, 67, 84, 254, 256; 1801 treaty, 62, 81, 288 n34; 1837 treaty, 72, 104; 1856 treaty, 114, 115

  Eden, Sir Ashley, lieutenant governor Bengal, 209–210, 221, 235

  Eden, Emily, 139

  Edmonstone, George, secretary Foreign Department, 18, 19

  Elgin, Earl of, governor general 173, 174, 248

  Elliot, Sir Henry, secretary Foreign Department, 78, 80, 92, 93–95

  The Englishman and Military Chronicle newspaper 23, 26, 213

  Faizabad, 62, 110, 112

  Falak Qadr, prince, heir apparent, 77–78, 79; death of, 100

  fall of the rupee, 268–9

  Farid-ud-Din Qadr, heir apparent, 156, 224–227, 228

  Farzand ‘Ali, Police deputy superintendent, Lucknow, 69, 72, 75

  Fateh-ud-daula, paymaster general 118; death in prison, 120

  Fayrer, Dr (later Sir) Joseph, 107, 108, 214

  Gajadhar Lal, accountant, 178–179

  Garden Reach, (Matiya Burj) Calcutta; auctions at, 263; archives, 9, 264; daru’l hakumat, 88; ‘debauchery and rioting’ in, 194; dependants left at, 267; description of, 165–167, 239–240; entertainers at, 241; fire at, 147; furnishings for, 178; gas lights at, 202; hired houses at, 20; jurisdiction in, 191; menagerie at, (see separate heading, menagerie); palace accounts, 179; policing in, 193, 196; poor construction of, 201; population of, 144; sanitary conditions poor, 196–197, 226; schools at, 228–233; ‘second Lucknow’ 232; servants left at, 268; ‘Sharar’s’ description of, 199–200, 201–202; Sibtainabad Imambarah, 244, 259, 264, 272; staff employed at, 242–243; Sultan Khana house, 167–168, 169, 173, 218, 241, 257, 271–272; supposed decline of, 198; 1864 cyclone, 200

  Garden Reach Road, (now Nawab Wajid Ali Shah Road), 167–8, 242, 244 259, 272–273

  Ghazi ud-Din Haider, king, 84–86

  Gomti river, 55

  Hakeem Mahomed Munshee (Muhammad Munshi), 223, 225

  Hamid ‘Ali, prince, heir apparent, 12, 34, 35, 36, 41, 47, 224, 227, 228; meets James Outram, 108; delays return to Calcutta, 122

  Hamilton & Co, jewellers, 147, 264

  Hanuman Dubey, sentry, 116

  Hardinge, Lord, (Viscount after 1846), 70, 91; farewell tour, 75; meets king at Cawnpore, 79; meets king in Lucknow, 80

  Harley House, Marylebone, 31, 33, 42

  Hayes, Captain Fletcher, 186, 295 n31

  Hazrat Mahal, begam, (Mahak Pari), 5–6, 16; birth of son, 133, 142; flees to Nepal 123; left in Lucknow 143; parents, 137

  Hazrat Maryam Makani, king’s grandmother, 137

  Herbert, Major Charles, government agent to king, 8, 146, 169, 179, 184, 189–190, 191, 193; accompanies king from jail, 124; advice on tradesmen, 175–176; denies being ‘in charge of king’, 192; introduces Amir ‘Ali to king, 180; visits Garden Reach after fire, 147–149; visits jail, 118, 122

  Hickey, William, author 166

  Hodges, William, artist, 165

  Home, Robert, court artist 85

  Hur Pari, king’s wife, 54

  Ilbert Bill, 195

  Imdad Husain Khan (Amin-ud-daula), chief minister Awadh, 59, 70; dismissed 73–74; kidnapped 71–72; receives pension 77

  India Office Library, London, 245

  Indian delegations to London, 22

  Iqbal-ud-daulah, claimant to Awadh throne, 59, 87

  Iqtidar-ud-daulah, eyewitness at Qaisarbagh performance, 52–53

  Ishqnamah, (also known as Pari Khana), king’s autobiography, 54, 129–130; description of, 135–138

  Isle of Wight, 11, 165

  Janab-i ‘Aliyyah, queen-mother, 100, 283 n4, 286 n8; arrival in Paris 44–45; arrival in London 30; arrival in Southampton 11–17, 22; audience with Queen Victoria 40–41; death and funeral in Paris 45–46, 121; lack of funds, 35; leaves Calcutta 23; leaves Southampton by train, 33; meets James Outram 114; pantomime visit 38–39; petitions to Parliament rejected 41–42; receives visitors, 31

  Jarratt, Colonel, Persian scholar, 263

  Jehan Qadr, prince, nephew of king, 232, 271

  Julus-ud-daulah, ADC to king, 34, 41

  Kamal-ud-Din Haider, author, 103

  Khanum Begam, king’s wife, 152

  Khas Mahal, official wife of king, 131–132, 133, 142, 143, 258, 260; claims crown jewels, 147; demands separate pension, 146; leaves Garden Reach 222–223, 228; moves to new house 150; refuses to sign affidavit, 151; takhallus ‘Alam’ 132

  King, Dr George, superintendent Royal Botanic Garden, 206, 208, 214

  Lawrence, Sir Henry, chief commissioner Awadh, 146, 226

  Lawrence, Sir John, governor general, 135, 174, 178, 182, 186, 246, 253; comments on High Court case, 183; verdict on king’s debtors, 188

  Legislative Acts, 1857, Act XIV, 116; 1862, Act VIII, 173, 177, 181; 1868, Act XIII, 186; 1887, Act XIX, 280

  Login, Dr John, 71, 252

  Login, Lady, 30, 139

  Lucas, Samuel, radical writer, 37

  Lucknow; Akhtarnagar, 64; Alam Bagh, 132, 223; British Residency 60, 71, 146; Chattar Manzil, 80, 130; Daulat Khana Palace, 52; exodus from, 145, 168, 171; Farhat Bakhsh Palace, 60, 66; Hussainabad Picture Gallery, 55, 90, 128; karbala Diyanat ud-Daulah, 189; Lal Barahdari, 60, 66–67, 85; menagerie, 212–213; Rashk-e-Iram, 141; royal libraries, 93–95; Qaisarbagh Palace (see separate entry, Qaisarbagh); Sibtainabad Imambarah, 67; Taronwali Kothi (Observatory) 102–103, 228–229; temples destroyed 68–69

  Lyall, Alfred, secretary to government, 157

  Mackenzie Lyall & Co, valuers, 266

  Mackinnon & Mackenzie, letting agents, 231

  Mahak Pari (see Hazrat Mahal)

  Maine, Henry, lawyer, 175

  Malcolm, Sir John, 250

  Malleson, Major George, agent to king, 139, 152, 153

  Manchester, 25–26; Art Treasures Exhibition 41

  Manohar Das, moneylender, 173

  Martin, Major General Claude, 131, 293 n14

  Mashuq Mahal,
king’s wife, 143, 161; death of, 224; divorced 156–157; enhanced pension, 159

  Masih-ud-Din Khan Bahadur, maulawi, king’s agent in England, 34–35, 41, 43, 46, 47, 122; publishes Oude: Its Princes and Its Government Vindicated, 38

  Mayo, Earl of, governor general, 245–246, 247

  Meer Hassan Ali, Mrs, 140

  menageries, origins of, 210–212

  menagerie at Garden Reach, 207, 209, 210, 213; animals starving, 265; animal fights at 211; auctioned off, 266; costs of, 219–220; criticism of, 207, 209; description of, 218–219; inspection party visit 216; menagerie committee set up, 217, 222; tigers’ escape from 206–209

  Menzies, Thomas, king’s agent, 18, 20

  Mir Mahdi, king’s companion in Lucknow, 69, 70, 75

  Mir Qasim, nawab of Bengal, 83

  Muhammad ‘Ali Shah, king, 104, 137

  Muhammad Babur, prince, 233

  Muharram, 67, 86, 88, 102, 111, 241, 244, 257

  Munawwar-ud-daula, nawab, chief minister Awadh, 19

  Murshidabad, 4, 245

  Musharraf ud-daulah (Haji Sharif) i/c king’s bodyguard, 75

  Mustafa Khan, half-brother to the king, 60

  mut‘ah marriages, 133; categories of, 139–140; wives at Garden Reach, 269–271

  Mysore princes, 222; Ghulam Muhammad, prince, 252–253, 254, 255

  Nasir ud-Din Haider, king, 112, 189, 211, 228; employs Brandon, 27

  New York Times, The, 239

  Nosherwan Qadr, prince, king’s first son 5, 60, 77

  Otway, Sir Arthur, MP, 25, 39

  Oude Blue Book, 37–38

  Ouseley, Colonel Richard, king’s agent, 43–44

  Outram, Colonel (later General Sir) James, British Resident 16, 28; arrival in Lucknow 108–109; briefed on annexation 113–114

  Paddington Old Cemetery, 46

  Pari Khana (see Ishqnamah)

  paris (fairies) 141–142

  Peacock, Captain Henry, agent to king, 186–188, 194, 222

  Peel, Sir Lawrence, chief justice, 165, 167

  Peninsular & Oriental Company, 272

  Père Lachaise cemetery, Paris, 45, 47–48

  Pioneer, The, newspaper, 182, 253

  Prideaux, Colonel William agent to king, 193–194, 196, 256, 257, 258, 260; winds up Garden Reach estate, 261 et seq

  Prince of Wales, 215–216; visit to Calcutta, 217

  Private Life of an Eastern King (William Knighton, author) 112–113

  Private Life of an Eastern Queen (William Knighton, author) 283 n4

  Punch, magazine, 13–14

  Qaisar Begam, wife of King, 98, 134

  Qaisarbagh Palace; cost of 57; criticism of, 56; description of, 57–58; painting of, 49–50; sack of, 135; Safed Barahdari, 6, 50, 58; theatrical performances in, 51; treasury, 146; Yogi Mela, 54–55

  Qamar Qadr, prince, heir apparent, 235, 258, 259, 264, 265

  Raja Balkrishan, diwan, 65, 66, 115

  Ram Brahma Sanyal, superintendent Zoological Gardens, 214–215, 266

  Randall, Captain, agent to king, 248

  Rawlinson, Major Henry, chairman Court of Directors, 36, 289 n5; agent in Baghdad, 67

  Rayhan-ud-daulah, garden superintendent, 216, 219

  Richmond, Colonel Archibald, British Resident in Awadh, 67, 69, 88; rebuked by governor general, 70, 72; negotiations with kidnappers, 71; vetoes Court appointments, 75–76, 80–81

  Ripon, Marquess of, governor general, 249, 253

  Roebuck, Rt. Hon. John, MP 25

  Russell, William Howard, The Times correspondent, 215

  Rutledge, William, animal dealer, 219–220, 265–266

  Safaraz Pari (later Mahal), wife of king, 134, 136–137

  Safdar ‘Ali, munshi, king’s agent 148, 176, 177, 179–180, 187; creditor to king 157; gets deeds of Sultan Khana, 173; ‘Heirs of Safdar ‘Ali’ 182, 186

  Sally Begam, 131–132

  Sayyid Dildar ‘Ali Naqvi, cleric, 87

  Sayyid Muhammad Nasirabandi, cleric, 86, 111

  Shah Alam II, Mughal emperor, 131, 132

  Shah Ghulam Husain, religious activist, 110–111

  Shahzadi Sahibah, princess, 269–270

  Shakespear, John, British Resident, 61

  ‘Sharar’, Abdul Halim, author, 57, 141

  Shi‘a, faith of the nawabs, 86, 244

  Shuja-ud-daulah, nawab 77, 83

  Sikandar Hashmat, prince, younger brother to king, 34, 35, 36, 41, 54, 79, 101, 115, 130; death of 46, 122

  Sindh, amirs of, 235, 251

  Sleeman, Major General Sir William, British Resident, 21, 37, 55, 61, 88; appointed Resident, 96–98; expels Brandon 28; negative reports on king 107; paranoid behaviour, 101; plans to retire, 108; suggests new treaty, 100; winter tour of Awadh 103–104

  Southampton, 12

  Soutter, Mr, Police commissioner, Calcutta, 206, 208, 209, 216–217

  Sprenger, Dr Aloys 93–95

  Statesman, The, newspaper, 257–259

  ta’luqdars, 62

  tawa’if, 3, 141

  temporary structures, 52

  Theatre Royal, Drury Lane 38

  Times, The newspaper 13, 31, 32, 36, 37

  Thomson, Colonel Mowbray, agent to king, 153, 201, 216, 219, 221, 222, 225, 239, 279; comments on tiger escape, 208–209; criticises king, 156–160; ‘hero of the mutiny’154; views on king’s divorces 155, 223

  Tipu Sultan of Mysore, 250, 252, 254–255

  Uprising (mutiny) of 1857/58, 40, 116

  vaccination in India, 197

  Vernon-Smith, Robert, president, Board of Control; comments on royal delegation 25–26, 29–30; visits queen-mother 39

  Victoria, queen; agrees gun salute for king, 246; assassination attempt, 249; attitude to king, 36; attitude to queen-mother 39; meets queen-mother, 40–41; patronises ‘deposed despots’ 29; presented with Ishqnamah, 135; privy purse, 181; receives taziatnamah from king, 249; 1858 proclamation, 6, 16, 123

  Wajid Ali Shah; anticipated death by British officials, 78, 100, 175, 183–184, 251, 256; appointed heir apparent, 60; arrival of wives in Calcutta 145; assaulted by prison guard, 120; blames Safdar ‘Ali, 185, 187; borrows money from Company 42; character of 10, 61, 256, 279; claims by creditors, 185–186; complaints boxes, 89; confronts Major Thomson, 162; Cophetua syndrome, 142; coronation of, 66–67; Dastur-i-Wajidi, manual of government, 99–100; deafness, 59, 80; death of, 257; defends his menagerie, 217–218, 220; describes his journey to Calcutta 19–20; description of, 50, 59, 128, 256; dies intestate, 260; divorces mut‘ah wives, 154–156, 159–160; education of, 59; education of his sons, 229, 235; funeral of, 2, 259; gullibility of, 177, 183, 187; hypochondriac behaviour, 100–101; illness complaints, 118–119; impotence of, 235; leaves Lucknow for Calcutta 17; describes his journey 19–20; Fort William imprisonment 40, 278; identifies with Lord Krishna, 54; meeting with governor-general, 78–80; narrative poems (masnavi) 51, 119; pension from British government 36, 114, 146, 193, 227; pension deductions, 156–161; pleads illness, 23; religious attitude, 88; reply to Oude Blue Book, 38; reviews Awadh regiments, 90; ‘singing and dancing men,’73; ‘sunk in debauchery’ 153; support for British 124, 253; theatrical director, 53–54; venereal illness, 98–99, 134; views on 1857 Uprising; visits Zoological Gardens 214–215; takhallus (Akhtar) 51; 1847 visit to Cawnpore, 79; 21-gun salutes, 6, 20, 245–246

  Wajid Mahal, wife of king; divorced 156, 157–158

  wasiqahdars, pensioners of the king, 77

  Wauchope, Samuel, Police commissioner, Calcutta, 191–192

  Wilcox, Colonel Richard, astronomer, 79, 102–3

  Wood, Sir Charles, secretary of State for India, 253

  Yasmin Pari, (later Mahal) wife of king, 54, 134, 137

  ‘Zafar’, Bahadur Shah, king of Delhi, 86, 252

  Zulfiqar ud-daulah, king’s brother in law, 120, 176; gets deeds of Sultan Khana, 173

   

 

 


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