Philip Meadows Taylor
Colonel Philip Meadows Taylor CSI (September 25, 1808 – May 13, 1876 in Menton), an administrator and novelist, was born in Liverpool, England.
Biography
At the age of fifteen he was sent out to India to become a clerk to a Bombay merchant. The merchant was in financial difficulties, though. In 1824, Taylor gladly accepted a commission in the service of the Nizam of Hyderabad, to which service he remained devotedly attached throughout his long career. He was speedily transferred from military duty to a civil appointment, and in this capacity he acquired a knowledge of the languages and the people of southern India which has seldom been equalled.[1]
He studied the laws, geology, and the antiquities of the country, being one of the foremost early experts on megaliths.[2] He was alternately judge, engineer, artist, and man of letters. While on furlough in England in 1840, he published the first of his Indian novels, Confessions of a Thug, in which he reproduced the scenes which he had heard about the Thuggee cult, described by the chief actors in them. This book was followed by a series of tales, Tippoo Sultaun (1840), Tara (1863), Ralph Darnell (1865), Seeta (1872), and A Noble Queen (1878), all illustrating periods of Indian history and society, and giving a prominent place to the native character, for which and the native institutions and traditions he had a great regard and respect. Seeta in particular was remarkable for its sympathetic and romantic portrayal of the marriage between a British civil servant and a Hindu widow just before the Indian Mutiny. Taylor himself had married Mary Palmer, the Eurasian granddaughter of William Palmer, the East India Company's Resident at Hyderabad (who had married "one of the Princesses of the Royal House of Delhi").[3] Returning to India he acted from 1840 to 1853 as correspondent for The Times. He also wrote a Student's Manual of the History of India (1870).[1]
About 1850, Meadows Taylor was appointed by the Nizam's government to administer, during a long minority, the principality of the young Raja Venkatappa Nayaka He succeeded without any European assistance in raising this small territory to a high degree of prosperity. Such was his influence with the natives that during the Indian Mutiny in 1857, he held his ground without military support.
Colonel Taylor, whose merits were now recognized and acknowledged by the British government of India – although he had never been in the service of the Company – was subsequently appointed Deputy Commissioner of the western "Ceded Districts". He succeeded in establishing a new assessment of revenues that was both more equitable to the cultivators, and more productive to the government. By perseverance he had raised himself from the condition of a half-educated youth, without patronage, and without even the support of the Company, to the successful government of some of the most important provinces of India, 36,000 square miles (93,000 km2) in extent and with a population of more than five millions.[1]
On his retirement from service in 1860 he was made a CSI, and given a pension. Due to health problems towards the end of his life, he returned and spent time in India, before dying in Menton, Southern France.[1]
Contribution to the Gulburga Region
Taylor made a number of contributions to the Gulburga region in India, by initiating a number of reforms. He encouraged improvement of agriculture, opened up more job opportunities, started schools and improved infrastructure. He was known to spend his own money to provide drought relief. The local people started called him as ‘Mahadev Baba’. Taylor carried out significant archaeological excavations in Gulburga, and published his findings in the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy and the Journal of The Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society[4]
Indian archaeology
Taylor was painter and photographer, and is counted amongst the earliest and path-breaking archaeologists of India. Rich tributes were paid to Taylor, by the Archaeological Survey of India in its book History of Indian Archaeology 1784-1947, written by Sourindranath Roy. The archaeological work done by Taylor is acknowledged as being very significant.[4]
Books
- Megalithic Tombs and other Ancient Remains in the Deccan
- The Story of My Life
- Confessions of a Thug
- Tippoo Sultaun (1840)
- Tara (1863)
- Ralph Darnell (1865)
- Seeta (1872)
- A Noble Queen (1878)
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 Chisholm 1911.
- ↑ God-apes and Fossil Men: Paleoanthropology of South Asia - Kenneth A. R. Kennedy - Google Books. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
- ↑ Philip Meadows Taylor The Story of My Life (Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons) 1877 pp62-3
- 1 2 Sirnoorkar, Srinivas (19 November 2013). "It's a Taylor-made task" (Bangalore). Deccan Herald. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Taylor, Philip Meadows". Encyclopædia Britannica. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Garnett, Richard (1898). "Taylor, Meadows". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
External links
- Works by Philip Meadows Taylor at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Philip Meadows Taylor at Internet Archive
- Philip Meadows Taylor. The story of my life, by M. Taylor. Ed. by his daughter (A.M. Taylor). Oxford University, 1882
- Philip Meadows Taylor. Confessions of a Thug. Oxford University Press, 1839.
- Philip Meadows Taylor. Tippoo Sultaun; a tale of the Mysore war C K Paul, 1880.
- David Finkelstein Philip Meadows Taylor - Victorian Fiction Research Guide