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Governor-General of
India, was born on 30 March 1785, at Wrotham, Kent, England. He
served in the Peninsular campaigns under the Duke of Wellington.
In 1820, he was returned to Parliament as member from Durham. He
was chief secretary for Ireland in 1830 and again in 1834. He was
secretary of war in Sir Robert Peel's cabinet, 1841-44. Hardinge
was sent to India to replace his brother-in-law, Lord Ellenborough,
as Governor-General in 1844. Like his predecessor, Lord Hardinge
kept a watchful eye on developments in the Sikh kingdom. He continued
military preparations, but resisted pressure from Whitehall for
an early war with the Sikhs, in order to give himself more time.
On 13 December 1845 a party of Sikhs in its own territory on the
left of the River Sutlej was attacked by the British leading to
the declaration of war upon the Sikh kingdom. During the seventeen
months between Ellenborough's departure from India and the commencement
of hostilities, Lord Hardinge had assembled 45,000 men and 98 guns
on the advanced outposts on the Sutlej, besides a river flotilla
of 60 armed 3-ton boats to bridge the river. In the war, Hardinge,
waiving his right to the supreme command, served as second-in-command
to Sir Hugh Gough.
Hardinge's policy towards the Sikhs, particularly
his peace settlement and his deal with Gulab Singh regarding the
sale of Kashmir to him, were assailed by the Whig Opposition in
Parliament. He had avoided annexation, which he argued would involve
political and financial liabilities. He commended instead his "political
experiment"-annexation without encumbrances. Hardinge could
never convince his friends and critics in England of the honesty
of his deal with Gulab Singh. The allegation that Gulab Singh had
bartered away the interests of his Sikh sovereign for recognition
as a ruler, independent of Lahore, were freely made. It was said
that Hardinge had granted him Kashmir as a reward for his treachery
towards the Sikhs.
After the first Anglo-Sikh war, Hardinge was
created Viscount. In 1852, he succeeded the Duke of Wellington as
Commander-in-Chief of the British army. He was promoted Field Marshal
in 1855. He died on 24 September 1856.
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