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John Caillaud

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Commands held
  
Indian Army

Name
  
John Caillaud


Service/branch
  
British Army

Rank
  
Brigadier general

Allegiance
  
Kingdom of Great Britain

Battles/wars
  
Jacobite Rebellion Seven Years' War

Died
  
December 1812, Aston Rowant, United Kingdom

Battles and wars
  
Jacobite risings, Seven Years' War

Brigadier-General John Caillaud (5 February 1726 – December 1812) was Commander-in-Chief, India.

Contents

Military career

Caillaud was commissioned into Onslow's Regiment in 1743. In 1746, during the Jacobite Rebellion, he took part in the Battle of Falkirk and the Battle of Culloden. In 1752 he was made a Captain in the Madras Army. During the Seven Years' War he was involved with skirmishes with the French.

In 1759 he was made Commander of the Bengal Army. Edmund Burke later claimed that Caillaud had set three official seals to document expressing an intent to kill Ali Gauhar, the Mughal Crown Prince, allegations that Caillaud strongly denied.

He subsequently became Commander of the Madras Army in which capacity he negotiated a treat with Nazim Ali which guaranteed Nazim Ali military support in return for occupation of certain lands by the East India Company.

In 1775 he retired to Aston Rowant in Oxfordshire and died in December 1812.

Family

In 1763 he married Mary Pechell: they had no children.

References

John Caillaud Wikipedia