请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Robert Merttins Bird
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Revenue officer

  3. Later life

  4. Report

  5. Evangelical background

  6. Legacy

  7. Family

  8. Notes

  9. External links

Robert Merttins Bird (1788–1853) was a British civil servant in the Bengal Presidency. He is known for the far-reaching "Mahalwari" tax reform.

Early life

He was the son of Robert and Lucy Bird of Taplow, Buckinghamshire;[1] his younger brother Edward was the father of Isabella Bird.[2] The marriage was of cousins, with the same surname, and there were four sons and six daughters.[3]

Bird entered the East India College, after preparation by a tutor, and with the support of George Smith; and passed out ninth in its first leaving class, the class of 1808.[4] He arrived in India on 9 November 1808.[5] There was more time in college, at Fort William, after which he took the judicial route, one of the two main specialisations for the civil servants of the East India Company.[4] He began service as an assistant to the registrar of the Sadr Diwani Adalat in Calcutta.[5]

The first mofussil (provincial) experience for Bird was a tour in 1813 with William Wilberforce Bird, a first cousin. It took him to the Benares area of North India. He was a magistrate and judge at Ghazipur from 1816 to 1826, then becoming judge at Gorakhpur, remaining in what is now northern Uttar Pradesh.[4] His first wife died in 1821, in the first cholera pandemic, leaving him with children to bring up, and his sister Mary came out from England to support him. He married again in 1824.[6][7]

Revenue officer

In 1829 Bird was transferred to the appointment of commissioner of revenue and circuit for the Gorakhpur division.[5]

As a judicial officer, Bird had acquired insight into land ownership in India, and the impact on it of the legal framework. On his appointment as a revenue commissioner, he made a reputation, and when it was decided in 1833 to revise the settlement of the land revenue of the North-Western Provinces, Lord William Bentinck, the governor-general, chose Bird. Retaining his seat as a member of board of revenue recently constituted at Allahabad, he took sole charge of the settlement operations, which he brought to completion by the end of 1841. The conclusions were stated in a major report.[5] Bird retired from the service in 1842, and was succeeded on the board of revenue by James Thomason.[8]

Later life

Bird spent the remainder of his life in England, where he was a member of the committee of the Church Missionary Society. A few months before his death, which occurred at Torquay on 22 August 1853, he gave evidence before the committee of the House of Commons on the renewal of the East India Company's charter.[5]

Report

Bird's work on land revenue was recorded in a report which he laid before government early in 1842. The settlement was the most complete that had yet been made in British India. It covered an area of {{convert|72000|sqmi|km2}}, and a population of 23 millions. In the report he explained that the work had not been confined to an accurate assessment of what could be taxed. It also included:[5]

"the decision and demarcation of boundaries, the defining and recording the separate possession, rights, privileges, and liabilities of the members of those communities who hold their land in severalty; the framing a record of the several interests of those who hold their land in common; the providing a system of self-government for the communities; the rules framed with their own consent according to the principles of the constitution of the different tenures; the preparation of the record of the fields and of the rights of cultivators possessing rights; and the reform of the village accounts and completion of a plan of record by their own established accountants, and according to their own method, by reference to which the above points of possession and right might, under the various changes to which property is subject, continue to be ascertained."

A corresponding system of accounts for the offices of the tehsildars, and for those of the collectors of districts, was also framed.[5] The revenue settlement for the North-West Provinces was praised by John Stuart Mill.[9]

Evangelical background

Bird, an evangelical Christian, supported the Church Missionary Society's work while still in India.[10] By family background he was linked to the Wilberforces: his mother Lucy Wilberforce Bird was the sister of William Wilberforce Bird the Member of Parliament for {{constlk|Coventry}}; William Wilberforce was a close relation, Lucy being the daughter of his aunt Judith.[11][12] He was joined in India in 1823 by his sister Mary Bird (1789–1834), who worked as a missionary.[13] The second sister, Lucy, married in 1828 the Rev. Marmaduke Thompson, who had been in India from 1806 to 1819 as a chaplain nominated by Charles Simeon, returning as a widower to the United Kingdom.[14][15]

William Bell Mackenzie wrote a preface to an edition in 1855 of writings on the Pentateuch, Bible Teaching, by three of Bird's sisters.[16]

Legacy

Penner identifies the "Bird-Thomason school" of officials that followed the approach laid down by Bird. It included, but was not limited to, George Campbell (1824–1892), John Russell Colvin, Frederick Currie, Robert Needham Cust, George Frederick Edmondstone, Henry Miers Elliot, John Laird Mair Lawrence, Charles Grenville Mansel, Robert Montgomery, William Muir, Edward Anderdon Reade, Richard Temple, and Edward Parry Thornton. Of those, Colvin, Cust, Lawrence, Mansel, Montgomery, Muir, Reade, Temple and Thornton are identified as evangelicals.[17]

Family

Bird married:[1]

  1. In 1810, Jane Grant Brown, daughter of the Rev. David Brown, who died in Gorakhpur on 6 September 1821;&91;18&93;
  2. In 1824 in Cape Town, Jane Bird, a first cousin as daughter of William Wilberforce Bird, comptroller of customs there, who died in Taplow in 1845;&91;19&93;&91;20&93;
  3. In 1848, Henrietta Maria Jane Grenfell of Taplow. She was the fifth daughter of Pascoe Grenfell, and the wives of Charles Kingsley and James Froude were her sisters.&91;21&93;

The eldest son of the first marriage was Robert Wilberforce Bird.[22] Another son, Charles Robinson Bird, was rector of Castle Eden and father of Mary Bird,[23][24] and of Harriet Amelia Scott Bird (1864–1934) who trained at the Edinburgh Medical College for Women, worked at Leith Hospital, married Robert William MacKenna and was mother of Robert Merttins Bird MacKenna, both physicians.[25][26][27]

Of Bird's daughters, Elizabeth married James Harington Evans, as his second wife, and Lucy Elizabeth married Frederick Currie, also as his second wife.[28][29] There were two other children of the marriage.[25] James Grant Bird, the fourth son, died in 1849.[30]

Notes

1. ^{{cite ODNB|id=2450|first=David J.|last=Howlett|title=Bird, Robert Merttins}}
2. ^{{cite book|author=Anna M. Stoddart|title=The Life of Isabella Bird|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-xBcow-86nMC&pg=PA4|date=16 June 2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-108-02896-7|page=4}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/stream/lifeofisabellabi00stoduoft#page/2/mode/1up|title=The life of Isabella Bird : (Mrs Bishop)|last=Stoddart|first=Anna M.|year=1906|work=Internet Archive|publisher=London|page=2|accessdate=23 March 2017|location=Murray}}
4. ^{{cite book|author=Peter Penner|title=The Patronage Bureaucracy in North India: the Robert M. Bird and James Thomason School, 1820–1870|year=1986|publisher=Chanakya Publications|pages=10–1}}
5. ^{{cite DNB|wstitle=Bird, Robert Merttins|volume=5}}
6. ^{{cite book|author=The Indiaman Magazine|title=The Bengal Obituary Booklet|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ARlxAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA64|date=25 June 2008|publisher=Lulu.com|isbn=978-1-4092-0641-5|page=64}}
7. ^{{cite book|author=Peter Penner|title=The Patronage Bureaucracy in North India: the Robert M. Bird and James Thomason School, 1820–1870|year=1986|publisher=Chanakya Publications|page=12}}
8. ^{{cite DNB|wstitle=Thomason, James|volume=56}}
9. ^{{cite book|author=John Stuart Mill|title=Writings on India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TJwHWEA6JRMC&pg=PA98|year=1990|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-0-8020-2717-7|page=98}}
10. ^{{cite book|author=Penelope Carson|title=The East India Company and Religion, 1698-1858|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NPZXXar1hiQC&pg=PA207|year=2012|publisher=Boydell Press|isbn=978-1-84383-732-9|page=207}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/bird-william-wilberforce-1758-1836|title=Bird, William Wilberforce (1758–1836), of Little Park Street, Coventry and The Spring, Kenilworth, Warws., History of Parliament Online|accessdate=23 March 2017}}
12. ^{{cite book|author=John Burke|title=A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Enjoying Territorial Possessions Or High Official Rank: But Uninvested with Heritable Honours|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KikAAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA722|year=1838|publisher=Henry Colburn|page=722}}
13. ^{{cite book|title=Dictionary of Indian Biography|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y8AKI2nqPBQC&pg=PA42|publisher=Ardent Media|page=42|id=GGKEY:BDL52T227UN}}
14. ^{{cite book|title=The Gentleman's magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O8xDAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA558|year=1828|publisher=E. Cave|page=558}}
15. ^{{acad|id=THM796M|name=Thompson, Marmaduke}}
16. ^{{cite book|title=Journal of Sacred Literature|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pBA2AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA475|year=1855|publisher=C. Cox|page=475}}
17. ^{{cite book|author=Peter Penner|title=The Patronage Bureaucracy in North India: the Robert M. Bird and James Thomason School, 1820–1870|year=1986|publisher=Chanakya Publications|pages=350–5}}
18. ^{{cite book|author=John Nichols|title=The Gentleman's Magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vqTPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA479|year=1822|publisher=E. Cave|page=479}}
19. ^{{cite book|title=The Quarterly Oriental Magazine, Review and Register|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JSMJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR59|year=1825|pages=lix}}
20. ^{{cite book|title=The Bengal Civil Service Gradation List, 1845–46|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6pteAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA108|year=1845|publisher=Thacker|page=108}}
21. ^{{cite DNBSupp|wstitle=Froude, James Anthony|volume=2}}
22. ^{{cite book|author=Edward Walford|title=The County Families of the United Kingdom Or, Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C9EkzFlBgz0C&pg=PA1070|year=1869|publisher=R. Hardwicke|page=1070}}
23. ^Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886/Bird, Charles Robinson
24. ^{{cite ODNB|id=38840|first=Denis|last=Wright|title=Bird, Mary Rebecca Stewart}}
25. ^{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/stream/marybirdinpersia00riceiala#page/n15/mode/1up|title=Mary Bird in Persia|last=Rice|first=Clara Colliver|year=1916|work=Internet Archive|publisher=Church Missionary Society|pages=2/3|accessdate=23 March 2017|location=London}}
26. ^{{cite web|url=https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/ad2be8d4-f22f-3bcf-9a70-4d78345fb3f3|title=Papers of Harriet Bird - Archives Hub|accessdate=24 March 2017}}
27. ^{{cite web|url=http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk/Biography/Details/2862|title=Munks Roll Details for Robert Merttins Bird MacKenna|accessdate=24 March 2017}}
28. ^{{cite ODNB|id=47090|first=Grayson|last=Carter|title=Evans, James Harington}}
29. ^{{cite ODNB|id=6953|first=Katherine|last=Prior|title=Currie, Sir Frederick}}
30. ^{{cite book|title=The Gentleman's Magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q1NIAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA553|year=1849|publisher=W. Pickering|page=553}}

External links

Attribution
{{DNB|wstitle=Bird, Robert Merttins|volume=5}}{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Bird, Robert Merttins}}

5 : 1788 births|1853 deaths|British East India Company civil servants|People from Taplow|English evangelicals

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/23 13:21:41