Major-General Sir David Ochterlony, 1st Baronet, GCB (12 February 1758 – 14 July 1825) was a Bengal Army officer who served as the British resident to the Mughal Empire court at Delhi. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, he spent most of his life on the Indian subcontinent in the service of the East India Company, seeing action in numerous conflicts.
He had two younger brothers, Gilbert and Alexander, and a sister, Catherine. Captain Ochterlony died in the Saint Vincent, West Indies, in 1765, after which his widow moved to England and his mother remarried to Sir Isaac Heard, Garter King-of-Arms.
In June 1782 while serving in the Second Anglo-Mysore War he was wounded and taken prisoner by the forces of Haidar Ali. He remained in captivity for the duration of the war and was only released when peace resumed in 1784. Thereafter, he returned to Kolkata, and in recognition of his eminent service during the war was conferred with the appointment of Judge Advocate-General for one of the divisions in the army. In 1796, he was promoted to captain and in 1800 to major.
In early 1803, he was appointed lieutenant colonel and accompanied Lord Lake throughout the Second Anglo-Maratha War. He was present at the battles of Koil, Aligarh and Delhi. Following the battle of Delhi he was appointed Resident at Delhi. In 1804, he defended the city with a very inadequate force against an attack by Yashwantrao Holkar which earned him the highest approbation from the Commander-in-Chief. He was thereafter given the command at Allahabad and then commanded a force on the banks of the Sutlej to check the expansion of the Sikhs. He was promoted to Major-general in 1814.
On the outbreak of the Anglo-Nepalese War in 1814 he was given the command of one of four converging columns. His was regarded as the only truly successful column throughout the war. He was subsequently promoted to the command of the main force in its advance on Kathmandu and outmaneuvered the by a flank march at the Kourea Ghat Pass, brought the war to a successful conclusion and obtained the signature of the Sugauli Treaty, which dictated the subsequent relations of the British with Nepal.
In return for his services during the war, he became a Knight Commander of the Bath, the first time the honour had been conferred on an officer of the British military in India, and was granted a baronetcy in November 1815. Endnote: See Major Ross of Bladensburg, The Marquess of Hastings ("Rulers of India" series) (1893). The following month he was given a pension of £1,000 per annum.
In December 1816, he was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath. In 1818, he was appointed Resident in Rajputana, with which the Residency at Delhi was subsequently combined. In the Pindari War between 1818 and 1819 he commanded the Rajputana column and made a separate agreement with Amir Khan. He detached him from the , and then, interposing his force between the two main divisions of the enemy, brought the war to an end without an engagement. He was afterwards made Resident and Political Agent of Malwa, thus having the entire superintendency of the affairs of central India. Today the CRPF Academy mess in Neemuch, Madhya Pradesh is housed in what was once the British residency, currently known as Ochterlony House. It was built by Ochterlony in 1822 at a cost of Rs. 50,000 (a huge amount in those days), sanctioned by the East India Company. Ochterlony lived there for three years before returning to Delhi.
During this period he encountered and engaged in an ongoing personal feud with James Tod, which was based most likely on the power politics within the hierarchy of the East India Company.
Although much younger than Ochterlony, Mubarak was seen as the dominant personality in the relationship. This led one observer to remark that "making Sir David the Commissioner of Delhi was the same as making Generallee Begum". Another observer remarked that "Ochterlony's mistress is the mistress now of everyone within the walls. As a result of her influence, Ochterlony considered raising his children as Muslims, and when his two daughters by Mubarak Begum had grown up, he adopted a child from the family of the Nawabs of Loharu, one of the leading Muslim families of Delhi. Raised by Mubarak, the girl went on to marry her cousin, a nephew of the famous Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib.William Dalrymple, The Last Mughal, p. 66
Mubarak even seems to have set herself up as a power in her own right, and even formed her own independent foreign policy. At one point, it was reported that "Mubarak Begum, alias Generalee Begum, fills the Delhi papers with accounts of the Nizars and Khiluts gifts given and taken by her in her transactions with the Vacquils ambassadors - an extraordinary liberty, if true."Gardner papers, National Army Museum, Letter 87, p. 226, 10 August 1821
However, in spite of all her power and high status, Mubarak Begum was widely unpopular among the British and the Mughals alike. She offended the British by calling herself "Lady Ochterlony" and on the other hand, also offended the Mughals by awarding herself the title "Qudsia Begum", a title previously reserved for the Emperor's mother. After Ochterlony's death, she inherited Mubarak Bagh, an Anglo-Mughal garden tomb Ochterlony had built in the north of Old Delhi, but her intense unpopularity combined with her background as a dancing girl ensured that no Mughal gentleman would use her structure. To this date, the tomb is still referred to by the local inhabitants of the old city as the "Randi ki Masjid" ( "Prostitute's Mosque").William Dalrymple, White Mughals, pp. 183-184
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