I
will post information about Sir William Henry Sleeman from Wikipedia. He is one
of my heroes.
William
Henry Sleeman
|
Born
|
8 August 1788
Stratton, Cornwall, Great Britain |
Died
|
10 February 1856 (aged 67)
At sea near Ceylon |
Occupation
|
Army officer, civil servant
|
Known for
|
Major-general
Sir William Henry Sleeman KCB (8 August 1788 – 10 February 1856) was a
British soldier and administrator in British India, best known for his work
suppressing Thuggee activity.
Early
life and career
Sleeman
he was born in Stratton, Cornwall,
the son of Philip Sleeman, a yeoman and supervisor of excise of St Tudy.
In
1809 Sleeman joined the Bengal Army and
later served in the Nepal War between
1814–1816.
In
1820 he was selected for civil employ, and became junior assistant to the Governor-General's agent in the Saugor and Nerbudda territories. In 1822 he was placed
in charge of Narsinghpur
District, and would later describe his two years in the role as by
far the most laborious of his life. He was gazetted to the rank of Captain in
1825, and in 1828 assumed charge of Jubbulpore District. In 1831 he transferred
to Sagar district to cover for a colleague on leave. Upon his colleague's
return, Sleeman continued with magisterial duties in Sagar until 1835.
Sleeman
became the earliest discoverer of dinosaur fossils in Asia when in 1828, serving
as a Captain in the Narmada valley
region, he noticed several basaltic formations
which he identified as having been "raised above the waters". By
digging around in the Bara Simla Hills, part of the Lameta formation near Jabalpur, he
unearthed several petrified trees, as well as some fragmentary dinosaur fossil
specimens. Subsequently he sent these specimens to London and to the Indian Museum in Calcutta. In 1877 the genus was named Titanosaurus Indicus by Richard Lydekker, but the taxonomic
position is doubt. Sleeman wrote about wild children who had been raised by
wolves with his notes on six cases. This was first published in the first volume
of his Journey through the kingdom of Oude in 1848-1850 (1858) and
reprinted in 1852 as An Account of Wolves Nurturing Children in Their Dens,
by an Indian Official and in The Zoologist (1888 12(135):87-98).
This caught the imagination of many and ultimately inspired Rudyard Kipling's Mowgli character.
Thugee
Supression
Sleeman
is best known for his work suppressing the Thuggee secret society. In 1835, he
captured "Feringhea" (also called Syeed Amir Ali, on whom the novel Confessions
of a Thug is based) and got him to turn King's evidence. He took Sleeman to a grave
with a hundred bodies, told the circumstances of the killings, and named the
Thugs who had done it. After initial investigations confirmed what Feringhea
had said, Sleeman started an extensive campaign, being appointed General
Superintendent of the operations for the Suppression of Thuggee and in February 1839, he assumed
charge of the office of Commissioner for the Suppression of Thuggee and
Dacoity. During these operations, more than 1400 Thugs
were hanged or transported for life. One of them, Bahram, confessed to have
strangled 931 persons with his turban. Detection was only possible by means of
informers, for whose protection from the vengeance of their associates a
special prison was established at Jabalpur (at the time Jubbulpore).
Sleeman had a Government Report made in 1839.
British
Resident and later life
Sleeman
served as Resident at Gwalior from 1843 to 1849, and at Lucknow from 1849 to
1856. Whilst Resident at Lucknow he survived three assassination attempts. He
was also opposed to the annexation of Oudh by Lord Dalhousie, but his advice
was disregarded.
Sleeman
also took an interest in phrenology and believed that the measurements of the
skulls could help him identify criminal ethnic groups.
He
died and was buried at sea near Ceylon on a recovery trip to Britain in 1856,
just six days after being awarded the Order of the Bath.
The
village Sleemanabad in Madhya Pradesh, India was named in his honour.
Family
Whilst in Jubbulpore, he married
Amélie Josephine, the daughter of Count Blondin de Fontenne, a French nobleman.
They had seven children.
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