James Grant Duff (8 July 1789 – 23 September 1858) was a British
soldier
A soldier is a person who is a member of an army. A soldier can be a conscripted or volunteer enlisted person, a non-commissioned officer, or an officer.
Etymology
The word ''soldier'' derives from the Middle English word , from Old French ...
and
historian
A historian is a person who studies and writes about the past and is regarded as an authority on it. Historians are concerned with the continuous, methodical narrative and research of past events as relating to the human race; as well as the stu ...
from Scotland, who was active in
British India
The provinces of India, earlier presidencies of British India and still earlier, presidency towns, were the administrative divisions of British governance on the Indian subcontinent. Collectively, they have been called British India. In one ...
.
Early life
Born James Grant, Duff was the eldest son of John Grant of
Kincardine O'Neil
Kincardine O'Neil ( gd, Cinn Chàrdainn, sco, Kinker) is a village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. It is situated between the towns of Banchory and Aboyne approximately 25 miles (40 km) west of Aberdeen on the north bank of the River Dee.
...
and Margaret Miln Duff of Eden, who died 20 August 1824. When his father died about 1799, his mother moved to Aberdeen, where he went to school, and then onto the
Marischal College
Marischal College ( ) is a large granite building on Broad Street in the centre of Aberdeen in north-east Scotland, and since 2011 has acted as the headquarters of Aberdeen City Council. However, the building was constructed for and is on long- ...
.
Military career
Grant Duff was to become a civil servant of the
East India Company
The East India Company (EIC) was an English, and later British, joint-stock company founded in 1600 and dissolved in 1874. It was formed to trade in the Indian Ocean region, initially with the East Indies (the Indian subcontinent and Southea ...
, but being impatient at the prospect of delay in obtaining a post he accepted a cadetship in 1805 and sailed for Bombay. After completing the cadet training in Bombay, he joined the Bombay Grenadiers. In 1808 Duff participated as an ensign in the storming of
Maliah, a fortified stronghold of
freebooter Freebooter may refer to:
* Marine freebooters, or pirates
* Filibuster (military), an individual who engages in unauthorized warfare against foreign countries
* Rapparee, the Irish usage
* Meadowbrook Freebooters, American polo team
* Freebooter (c ...
s, where he displayed bravery. At an unusually early age he became adjutant to his regiment and Persian interpreter, and was even more influential in it than this position indicated. While still a lieutenant he attracted the attention of
Mountstuart Elphinstone
Mountstuart Elphinstone (6 October 1779 – 20 November 1859) was a Scottish statesman and historian, associated with the government of British India. He later became the Governor of Bombay (now Mumbai) where he is credited with the open ...
, then Company resident of
Poona
Pune (; ; also known as Poona, (List of renamed Indian cities and states#Maharashtra, the official name from 1818 until 1978) is one of the most important industrial and educational hubs of India, with an estimated population of 7.4 million ...
, and became, along with
Henry Pottinger
Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Pottinger, 1st Baronet (; 3 October 1789 – 18 March 1856) was an Anglo-Irish soldier and colonial administrator who became the first Governor of Hong Kong.
Early life
Henry Pottinger was born at his family est ...
, his assistant and devoted friend. He was particularly successful in understanding the native character, and in discovering the mean between too rapid reform and too great deference to native prejudice and immobility.
During the long operations against the Peshwa
Bajirao II
Shrimant Peshwa Baji Rao II (10 January 1775 – 28 January 1851) was the 13th and the last Peshwa of the Maratha Empire. He governed from 1795 to 1818. He was installed as a puppet ruler by the Maratha nobles, whose growing power prompted him ...
, terminating in his overthrow, Grant Duff took a considerable part, both in a civil and in a military capacity, attaining the rank of captain in his regiment. Upon the settlement of the country he was appointed in 1818 to the important office of resident of
Satara State. His instructions are contained in a letter of Elphinstone's, dated 8 April 1818, and his remuneration was fixed at 2000 rupees per month, with allowances of 1500 rupees per month, which was in addition to an office establishment. Here, in the heart of a warlike province, the centre of the
Mahratta confederacy
The Maratha Empire, also referred to as the Maratha Confederacy, was an early modern Indian confederation that came to dominate much of the Indian subcontinent in the 18th century. Maratha rule formally began in 1674 with the coronation of Shi ...
, with but one European companion and a body of native infantry, he succeeded in maintaining himself in a hostile environment.
By proclamation dated 11 April 1818, Elphinstone made full powers over to Grant for the arrangement of Satara's affairs of state.
Pratap Singh the Rajah was rescued from his captivity by the
Maratha Peshwa, after the
Battle of Ashteh in February 1819, and restored to the throne under Grant Duff's tutelage. By a treaty of 25 September 1819, Grant Duff was to administer the country in the Rajah's name until 1822, and then transfer it to himself and his officers when they should prove fit for the task. Taking great care, he impressed upon the rajah that any intercourse with other princes, except such as the treaty provided for, would be punished with annexation of his territory. He trained him so successfully in the habits of business that Pratap Singh, having improved greatly under his care, was made direct ruler of Satara in 1822; but under Grant's successor, General
Briggs, his behaviour was unsatisfactory. During this time, Grant concluded the treaties with the Satara
jagirdars, ''viz''. 22 April 1820, the Pant Sachiv, the Pant Pratinidhi, the Duflaykur, and the
Deshmukh
Deshmukh (IAST:Dēśamukh), is a historical title conferred to the rulers of a . It is used as a surname in certain regions of India, specifically in the states of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh whose family received it as a ...
of
Phaltan
Phaltan () is a town, a tehsil, and a municipal council in the Satara district in the Indian state of Maharashtra. The town is about northeast of the city of Satara and about 110 km from Pune.
History
Phaltan was one of the non-salu ...
, and 3 July 1820, the Raja of
Akkalkot and the
Sheikh Waekur. The arrangements which he prescribed both for the etiquette of the Durbar and for the management of the revenue remained, as he had left them for many years.
Return to Scotland
After five years the anxiety and toil broke down his health, and he retired to Scotland, where he occupied himself in completing ''A History of the Mahrattas'', the materials for which he had long been collecting with great diligence and under peculiarly favorable opportunities, through his access to state papers, family and temple archives, and his personal acquaintance with the Mahratta chiefs.
[(see in Colebrooke, ''Life of Elphinstone'', several letters to and from Grant)] It was published in 1826 and was translated into the major languages of Western India, becoming required reading for Indian students during the British Raj. About 1825 he succeeded to the estate at Eden, and taking the additional name of Duff settled there, improving the property. In 1850 his wife Jane Catharine Ainslie (only daughter of Sir
Whitelaw Ainslie
Sir Whitelaw Ainslie FRSE (17 February 1767 – 29 April 1837) was a British surgeon and writer on '' materia medica,'' best known for his work as a surgeon in the employment of the East India Company in India. He published the first major Englis ...
, an eminent physician and author of the ''Materia Medica Indica''), whom he married in 1825, succeeded to an estate in Fife belonging to her mother's family, whereupon he took the further name of Cuninghame.
Family
Duff died on 23 September 1858, leaving a daughter and two sons, of whom the elder,
Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff
Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff (21 February 1829 – 12 January 1906), known as M. E. Grant Duff before 1887 and as Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff thereafter, was a Scottish politician, administrator and author. He served as the Under-Sec ...
, M.P. for the Elgin Burghs,
Under-Secretary for India 1868–1874, and
Under-Secretary for the Colonies The Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies was a junior Ministerial post in the United Kingdom government, subordinate to the Secretary of State for the Colonies and, from 1948, also to a Minister of State.
Under-Secretaries of State for the Co ...
1880–1881, and
Governor of Madras Presidency 1881–1886.
Works
* Full text online at ibiblio.org (All three volumes in HTML form, complete, chapter-by-chapter, with all footnotes and a combined index)
* ''A History of the Mahrattas,'' 3 vols. London, Longmans, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green (1826); also more recent editions,
vol. II only on line. Also
revised ed., S. M. Edwardes, London, etc., Oxford University Press (1921) Vol. II only on line.
Notes
Bibliography
*
*
** Banffshire Journal, September 1858, from which all the other periodical notices are taken
** James Grant Duff, History of the Mahrattas, 4 vols
** Burke's Landed Gentry
** Aitcheson, Indian Treaties, volume iv.
** Colebrooke's Elphinstone
** Dr. Murray Smith, 'Sattara', Calcutta Review, x.p. 437
Literature
** A.R. Kulkarni: ''James Cuninghame Grant Duff. Administrator-Historian of the Marathas''.Kolkata : Bagchi 2006 (first English edition, first Marathi edition ''Jemsa Kaniṃgahêma Grênṭa Ḍapha''. 31, 266 S. Puṇe : Vidyāpīṭha Prakāśana
971?
{{DEFAULTSORT:Duff, James Grant
People from Banff, Aberdeenshire
1789 births
1858 deaths
Alumni of the University of Aberdeen