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See also: Indian See also: administrator and novelist, was See also: born at Liverpool on the 25th of See also: September 18o8.- At the age of fifteen he was sent out to See also: India to become a clerk to a Bombay See also: merchant
.
On his arrival the See also: house was in See also: financial difficulties, and he was glad to accept In 1824 a commission in the service of his See also: highness the See also: nizam, to which service he remained devotedly attached throughout his long career
.
He was speedily transferred from military duty to a See also: civil See also: appointment, and in this capacity he acquired a knowledge of the See also: languages and the See also: people of See also: Southern Indiawhich has seldom been equalled
.
He studied the See also: laws, the geology, the antiquities of the country; he was alternately See also: judge, engineer, artist and See also: man of letters, for on his return to See also: England in 1840 on furlough he published the first of his Indian novels, Confesssions of a Thug, in which he reproduced, with singular vivacity and truth, the scenes which he had heard described by the chief actors in them
.
This See also: book was followed by a series of tales, Tippoo Sultaun (184o), See also: Tara (1863), See also: Ralph Darnell (1865), Seeta (1872), and A See also: Noble See also: Queen (1878), all illustrating periods of Indian See also: history and society, and giving a prominent place to the native character, for which and the native institutions and traditions he had a See also: great regard and respect
.
Returning to India he acted from 184o to 1853 as correspondent for The Times
.
He also wrote a Student's See also: Manual of the History of India (187o)
.
About 185o, Meadows See also: Taylor was appointed by the nizam's
See also: government to administer, during a long minority, the principality of the See also: young See also: raja of Shorapore
.
He succeeded without any See also: European assistance in raising this small territory to a high degree of prosperity, and such was his influence with the natives that on the occurrence of the See also: mutiny in See also: Bengal he held his ground without military support
.
Colonel Taylor, whose merits were now recognized and acknowledged by the See also: British government of India—although he had never been in the service of the Company—was subsequently appointed to the deputy See also: commissioner-See also: ship of the Western ceded districts, where he succeeded in establishing a new assessment of revenues at once more equitable to the cultivators and more productive to the government
.
By indefatigable perseverance he had raised himself from the condition of a See also: half-educated lad, without patronage, and without even the support of the See also: Company, to the successful government of some of the most important provinces of India, 36,000 square See also: miles in extent and with a population of more than five millions
.
On his retirement from service in 186o he was, made a C.S.I. and given a pension
.
Taylor died at See also: Mentone on the 13th of May 1876
.
See Meadows Taylor's The See also: Story of My See also: Life (1877)
.
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