Sir John William KayeKCSIFRS (3 June 1814 – 24 July 1876) was a British military historian, civil servant and army officer in India. His major works on military history include a three-volume work on The History of the Sepoy War in India. This work was revised later by George Bruce Malleson and published in six volumes in 1890 as Kaye and Malleson's History of the Indian Mutiny.
Biography
The second son of Charles Kaye, a solicitor, and Eliza, daughter of Hugh Atkins, he was born in London on 3 June 1814[1] and baptized on 30 June 1814. He was educated at Eton College (1823–1826) and at the Royal Military College, Addiscombe (1831–1832).[2]
From 1832 to 1841 he was an officer in the Bengal Artillery commissioned on 14 December 1832 as a Second-Lieutenant[3] and on 19 August 1840 promoted to Lieutenant.[4] During his time in the Army he began following literary pursuits both in India and in Britain.[5]
In 1839 he married Mary Catherine (1813–1893), daughter of Thomas Puckle of Surrey. He resigned his commission in the army on 1 April 1841[6] and began to write for newspapers such as the Bengal Hurkaru, which he edited.[7][8] In 1844 he started the Calcutta Review and contributed about 50 articles to it[9] while also writing a novel based in Afghanistan.
In 1845 Kaye returned to England to follow a professional literary career. He worked on his History of the War in Afghanistan, an account of the First Anglo-Afghan War. The book was well received: John Clark Marshman regarded it as "the most interesting of all works which have hitherto appeared on British Indian history".[10]
Kaye entered the Home Civil Service of the East India Company in 1856.[11] As John Stuart Mill was promoted to the post of Examiner of Indian correspondence, Kaye succeeded him as Political Assistant in the Examiner Department at East India House.[11] During this time, he wrote the History of the Sepoy War in India, his history of the Indian Rebellion of 1857. It is considered a "well-ordered and comprehensive narrative".[6] This work was later revised and continued by George Bruce Malleson as Kaye and Malleson's History of the Indian Mutiny and published in six volumes. It was completed in 1890.[6] The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography considers Kaye's History of the Sepoy War in India still to be a standard work.[6]
After retiring from the India Office in 1874 due to ill health,[6][14] he died in London at his home at Rose Hill on 24 July 1876.[9][15] An obituary in the Athenaeum praised him as a "household word in the East".[16]
————————— (1864). A History of the Sepoy war in India: 1857–1858. Vol. I (1 ed.). London: W. H. Allen & Co. The History of the Sepoy War in India (1864–1876), was later revised and continued by George Bruce Malleson and published in six volumes (1888–1889). A transcription of this later work is available online.
Gibson, Mary Ellis (2011). "Sir John William Kaye". Anglophone Poetry in Colonial India, 1780–1913: A Critical Anthology. Ohio University Press. pp. 196–202. JSTORj.ctt1j7x7m1.
^Gibson, Mary Ellis (2011). "Sir John William Kaye". Anglophone Poetry in Colonial India, 1780–1913: A Critical Anthology. Ohio University Press. pp. 196–202. JSTORj.ctt1j7x7m1.
Fairchild, Christina Lee (2017). "Because we were too English:" John Kaye and the 1857 Indian Rebellion (Masters thesis). University of Maryland. hdl:1903/19312.