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HUGH See also: British See also: field-marshal, third son of the Right Hon
.
See also: Sir See also: George See also: Henry
See also: Rose of Sandhills, See also: Christchurch, Hampshire (See also: minister plenipotentiary at the Prussian See also: court), was See also: born at Berlin on the 6th of See also: April 18or
.
He was educated at Berlin, and received military instruction at the cadet school
.
He entered the 93rd See also: Sutherland Highlanders as an ensign on the 8th of See also: June 182o, but was transferred to the 19th See also: Foot, then quartered in See also: Ireland, and took See also: part in preserving See also: order during the " Ribbon " outrages
.
He was promoted rapidly, to a lieutenancy in 1821, a captaincy in 1824, and an unattached majority at the end of 1826
.
He was brought into the 92nd Highlanders as a regimental major in 1829, and the following See also: year was appointed equerry to H.R.H. the duke of Cambridge
.
The 92nd Highlanders were in Ireland, and Rose again found himself employed in maintaining See also: law and order
.
He rendered important services in suppressing disaffected meetings, but his conduct was so courteous to the ringleaders that he incurred no See also: personal hostility
.
In 1833 he accompanied his regiment to See also: Gibraltar, and three years later to See also: Malta, where he exerted himself with so much zeal during a serious outbreak of cholera in attending to the sick soldiers that his conduct elicited an official approval from the governor and See also: commander-in-chief
.
In x839 he was promoted, by See also: purchase, to an unattached See also: lieutenant-colonelcy
.
In the following year Rose was selected, with other See also: officers and detachments of Royal Artillery and Royal See also: Engineers, for See also: special service in See also: Syria under the orders of the See also: foreign office
.
They were to co-operate on See also: shore, under Brigadier-General See also: Michell, R.A.—in conjunction with the See also: Turkish troops—with the British See also: fleet on the See also: coast, for the expulsion of Mehemet See also: Ali's See also: Egyptian army from Syria
.
Sir Stratford Canning sent Rose from Constantinople on aSee also: diplomatic See also: mission to See also: Ibrahim See also: Pasha, commanding the Egyptian army in Syria, and after its execution he was attached, as deputy adjutant-general, to the staff of See also: Omar Pasha, who landed at Jaffa with a large Turkish force from the British fleet
.
Rose distinguished himself in several engagements, and was twice wounded at El Mesden in See also: January 1841
.
He was mentioned in despatches, and received from the sultan the order of Nishan Iftihar in diamonds, the war medal and a sabre of honour
.
The See also: king of Prussia sent him the order of St
See also: John, and expressed his pleasure that " an early acquaintance " had so gallantly dis-tinguished himself
.
Shortly after he succeeded to the command of the British detachment in Syria with the
See also: local See also: rank of colonel, and in April 1841 he was appointed British See also: consul-general for Syria
.
For seven years, amidst See also: political complications and intrigues, Rose, by his energy and force of character, did much to arrest the horrors of See also: civil war, to prevent the feuds between the See also: Maronites and See also: Druses coming to a See also: head, and to administer See also: justice impartially
.
On one occasion in 1841, when he found the Maronites and Druses See also: drawn up in two lines and firing at each other, he rode between them at imminent See also: risk to his See also: life, and by the sheer force of a stronger will stopped the conflict
.
In the first year of his See also: appointment his See also: action saved the lives of several See also: hundred Christians at See also: Deir el Kbama, in the See also: Lebanon, and his. services were warmly recognized by See also: Lord See also: Aberdeen in the See also: House of Lords, and he was made C.B
.
In 1845, by his promptness and energy, at See also: great personal risk, he rescued 600 Christians belonging to the See also: American mission at Abaye, in the Lebanon, from the hands of the Druses, and brought them to See also: Beirut
.
In 1848, during the outbreak of cholera at Beirut, he was most devoted in his See also: attention to the sick and dying
.
At the end of this year he See also: left Syria on leave of See also: absence, and did not return, as Lord Palmerston appointed him secretary of See also: embassy at Constantinople in January 1851
.
In the following year he was See also: charge d'affaires in the absence of Sir Stratford Canning during the crisis of the question of the " See also: holy places," and he so strengthened the hands of the See also: Porte by his determined action that the See also: Russian attempt to force a secret treaty upon See also: Turkey was foiled
.
During the war with See also: Russia in 1854-56 Rose was the British See also: commissioner at the headquarters of the French army, with the local rank of brigadier-general
.
At See also: Varna he succeeded in quenching a fire which threatened the French small-arm See also: ammunition stores, and received the thanks of Marshal St See also: Arnaud, who recommended him for the See also: Legion of Honour
.
He was See also: present at the See also: battle of the See also: Alma, and was wounded on the following See also: day
.
At See also: Inkerman he reconnoitred the ground between the British and French armies with great sang-froid under a withering fire from the Russian pickets, and his See also: horse was shot under him
.
He distinguished himself on several other occasions in maintaining verbal communication between the allied forces, and by his tact and See also: judgment contributed to the See also: good feeling that existed between the two armies
.
His services were brought to See also: notice by the commanders-in-chief of both armies, and he received the medal with three clasps and the thanks of parliament, was promoted to be major-general, and was made K.C.B. and commander of the Legion of Honour
.
On ti e outbreak of the See also: Indian See also: Mutiny in 1857 Rose was given command of the See also: Poona division
.
He arrived in See also: September, and shortly after took command of the Central See also: India force
.
In January 1858 he marched from See also: Mhow, captured Rathgarh after a See also: short siege, and defeated the See also: raja of Banpur near Barodia in the samemonth., He then relieved See also: Saugor, captured Garhakota and the fort of Barodia, and early in See also: March defeated the rebels in the Madanpur, Pass and captured Madanpur and Chanderi
.
He arrived before
See also: Jhansi on the loth of March, and during its investment defeated a relieving force under Tantia Topi at the See also: Betwa on the 1st of April
.
Most of Rose's force was locked up in the investment, and to Tantia Topi's army of 20,000 he could only oppose 1540 men; yet with this small force he routed the enemy with a less of 15oo men and all their stores
.
Jhansi was stormed and the greater part of the city taken on the 3rd, and the rest the following day, and the fort occupied on the 5th
.
Kunch was captured, after severe fighting in a temperature of r 10 in the shade, on the 7th of May . Rose himself was only able to hold out by medical treatment, and many casualties occurred from the great heat . Under the same conditions the march was made onSee also: Kalpi
.
The rebels came out in multitudes on the 22nd of May to attack his small force, exhausted by hard marching and weakened by sickness, but after a severe fight under a burning See also: sun, and in a suffocating hot See also: wind, were utterly routed and Kalpi occupied the following day
.
Having completed his See also: programme, Rose obtained sick leave, and Sir Robert See also: Napier (q.v.) was appointed to succeed him, when See also: news came of the defection of Sindhia's troops and the
occupation of See also: Gwalior by Tantia Topi
.
Rose at once resumed command and moved on Gwalior by forced See also: marches, and on the 16th of June won the battle of See also: Morar
.
Leaving Napier there, he attacked Gwalior on the 19th, when the city was captured
.
The fortress was stormed and won the following day, and Napier gained a See also: signal victory over the flying enemy at See also: Jaora-See also: Alipur on the 22nd
.
Rose then made over the command to Napier and returned to Poona
.
It was to Rose's military See also: genius that the suppression of the Indian Mutiny was largely due; but owing to official jealousy his outstanding merit was not fully recognized at the See also: time
.
For his services he received the medal with clasp, the thanks of both houses of parliament, the regimental colonelcy of the 45th Foot, and was created G.C.B
.
By a legal quibble the Central India force, after protracted litigation, was not allowed its share of prize-See also: money, a loss to Rose of £30,000
.
Rose was promoted lieutenant-general for his " eminent services " in See also: February 1860, and the next See also: month was appointed commanderin-chief of the Bombay army, and on the departure of Lord See also: Clyde from India in the following June he succeeded him as commanderin-chief in India
.
During his tenure of the command-in-chief Rose improved the discipline of the army, while his powerful assistance enabled the changes consequent upon the amalgamation of the See also: East India See also: Company's army with the See also: Queen's army to be carried out without See also: friction
.
He was created K.C.S.I. in 1861 and G.C.S.I. on the enlargement of the order
.
On his return home he was made an honorary D.C.L. of See also: Oxford University
.
Rose held the Irish command from 1865 until 1870, was raised to the See also: peerage in 1866 as Baron See also: Strathnairn of Strathnairn and Jhansi, transferred to the colonelcy of the 92nd Foot, and appointed president of the army transport committee
.
By a good organization and disposition of the troops under his command in 1866 and 1867 he enabled the Irish See also: government to See also: deal successfully with the Fenian conspiracy
.
He was promoted general in 1867
.
On relinquishing the Irish command he was made an honorary LL.D. of Trinity See also: College, See also: Dublin
.
For the rest of his days he lived generally in See also: London
.
He was gazetted to the colonelcy of the Royal Horse See also: Guards in 1869, and promoted to be field marshal in June 1877
.
He died in See also: Paris on the 16th of See also: October 1885, and was buried with military honours in the graveyard of the Priory See also: Church, Chtistchurch, Hampshire
.
An equestrian
See also: bronze statue, by E
.
Onslow See also: Ford, R.A., was erected to his memory at Knightsbridge, London
.
He was never married
.
See Sir See also: Owen Tudor Berne, Clyde See also: ana Strathnairn," Rulers of India Series" (1891)
.
(R
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