Sneha Girap (Editor)

Robert Brownrigg

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Preceded by
  
John Wilson

Service/branch
  
Name
  
Robert Brownrigg

Rank
  
Awards
  
Order of the Bath

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Succeeded by
  

Robert Brownrigg httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Preceded by
  
John Wilsonacting governor

Commands
  
General Officer Commanding, Ceylon

Died
  
1833, Monmouth, United Kingdom

General Sir Robert Brownrigg, 1st Baronet, GCB (1759 – 27 April 1833) was a British statesman and soldier. Brownrigg brought the last part of Sri Lanka under British rule.

Contents

Robert brownrigg


Military career

Brownrigg was commissioned as an ensign in 1775. After service with the 9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot, he was appointed Military Secretary to the Duke of York in 1795, and accompanied him to The Helder in Holland in 1799.

In 1803 he was appointed Quartermaster-General to the Forces. In 1805 he was made Colonel of the 9th (East Norfolk) Regiment and in July 1809, he joined the expedition to the Schelt.

He left his post as Quartermaster-General to the Forces in 1811, and then, in 1813, he was appointed Governor of Ceylon. In 1815, he acquired the Kingdom of Kandy through an agreement with the help of defecting ministers of the Kandyan King, in the central region of the island, and annexed it to the British crown. The treaty was historically known as "Kandyan Convention". In recognition of his achievement, Brownrigg was created a baronet in 1816. T

Brownrigg fought the Great Rebellion of 1817–18 and managed to defeat that, aided by reinforcements from India.

He attained the rank of full General in 1819 and left Ceylon the following year.

The gilded bronze ancient Statue of Tara was reputedly found on the eastern coast of Sri Lanka. It was acquired by Brownrigg, who later donated it to the British Museum when he was living near Monmouth in 1830. This account however is rejected by the authorities in Sri Lanka who believe that Brownrigg took the statue from the last King of Kandy when the British annexed Kandy.

Brownrigg died near Monmouth in 1833.

Family

In 1789, Brownrigg married Elizabeth Catharine Lewis and together they went on to have six sons and a daughter. Then in 1810 he married Sophia Bissett.

Legacy

In 2011, President Mahinda Rajapaksa of Sri Lanka initiated, at the country's Parliament, a formal revocation of Robert Brownrigg's Gazette Notification - under which participants of the Great Rebellion of 1817–18 had been condemned as “traitors” and their properties confiscated. Brownrigg's Gazette Notification was declared null and void, and all those he branded as “traitors” were declared to be National Heroes of Sri Lanka. A National Declaration was awarded on their behalf to their descendants on Republic Day of Sri Lanka, 22 May.

References

Robert Brownrigg Wikipedia