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Born in August 1793, was the son of Sir Francis
Macnaghten. He was educated at Charterhouse and joined the service
of the East India Company in 1809. He studied Hindustani, Persian
and other Asiatic languages. His diplomatic career began towards the
close of 1830, when he accompanied Lord William Bentinck as secretary
on his tour through the upper and western provinces of India. He was
also present at the Governor-General's meeting with Maharaja Ranjit
Singh at Ropar in October 1831. Returning to Calcutta, he was appointed
to take charge of the secret and political departments and held that
post for four years. In 1838, he headed a mission to the Sikh capital
which led to the signing, on 26 June 1838, of the Tripartite treaty.
Macnaghten's mission to Lahore was undertaken
in view of the growing Russian influence in Persia and Afghanistan
and the supposed threat to the British possessions in India. Auckland's
government had decided to subvert the power of Amir Dost Muhammad
Khan and to restore ex-king Shah Shuja' to the throne at Kabul with
the help of Sikh arms and British money. Maharaja Ranjit Singh was
agreeable to Macnaghten's proposals, but laid down certain conditions.
Among other things, he demanded a perpetual tribute or subsidy of
200,000 rupees to be paid annually by Afghanistan to the Sikhs,
a compensation for forgoing claims on Shikarpur and Sindh, and the
cession of the district of Jalalabad and its dependencies to him.
All the demands of the Maharaja except the cession of Jalalabad
were agreed to by Macnaghten.
After the restoration of Shah Shuja' in 1839
in which the Sikh forces did not take part in any military operations
beyond the Khaibar, Sir William was appointed the British minister
and envoy to Kabul. Amidst mounting disagreements between the Sikhs
and the English, particularly on the Sikh-Afghan borders and the
two frontier territories of Swat and Buner, Macnaghten made wild
accusations against the Sikh Darbar. He demanded the recall of the
Sikh governor of Peshawar, General Avitabile, who, he alleged, was
coercing the Khaibaris and extending Sikh influence beyond their
borders. He complained that the Peshawar Barakzai tributaries of
the Sikh government were giving asylum to the Gilzaic chiefs, the
rebel Afghan subjects. Macnaghten finally contended that after the
death of Ranjit Singh, the Tripartite treaty had lapsed and proposed
that the Sikhs restore to the Afghans their former territories on
the Indus, including Peshawar.
On 23 December 1841, Sir William Macnaghten
was lured by the Afghans into a conference and assassinated by Prince
Akbar Khan, the deposed Amir's son.
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