William Hay Macnaghten: Difference between revisions
imported>Bovkaffe No edit summary |
imported>Bovkaffe No edit summary |
||
| Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
[[Category:Individuals]] | [[Category:Individuals]] | ||
[[Category:Englishmen]] | [[Category:Englishmen]] | ||
[[Category:Regicides]] | |||
[[Category:Governors]] | [[Category:Governors]] | ||
[[Category:British Army]] | [[Category:British Army]] | ||
[[Category:Templar allies]] | [[Category:Templar allies]] | ||
Revision as of 01:39, 2 February 2018

Sir William Hay Macnaghten, 1st Baronet (24 August 1793 – 23 December 1841) was a British civil servant in India, and the assistant of Lord Auckland in the late 1830s.
In 1839, William Hay Macnaghten and General Francis Cotton planned to poison Maharaja Ranjit Singh of the Sikh Empire, the last remaining Indian nation opposing the conquests of the British Empire. Macnaghten was an ally to the Templars[1], and both men wanted to unite India under the British Crown.[2] Cotton himself was a member of the Templar Order.[3]
Macnaghten and Cotton joined a feast thrown by the Maharaja in Amritsar, where they met the Assassin Arbaaz Mir, posing as an emmissary from Kashmir. Later, while consulting with the Maharaja in private, they had poisoned Ranjit Singh's tea, which would later result in his death.[3]
Gallery
-
Macnaghten meeting Arbaaz Mir
Reference
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||