ABSTRACT

First published in 1939, this volume describes many of the more colourful episodes in the career of Sir Thomas Maitland, while, in its account of his role as governor, it makes a valuable contribution to the study of early colonial history. Maitland was one of the most important figures in the formative period of the colonial administrative service during and immediately after the Napoleonic Wars. After a distinguished military career, he had two long periods of office in Ceylon, from 1805 to 1811, and from 1813 until his death in 1824 he acted as Governor of Malta and then of the Ionian Islands, where he made a lasting reputation for his vigour and honesty, as well as for his autocratic methods of administration which brought him to be popularly regarded as a tyrant.

part |13 pages

I

chapter I|12 pages

Apprenticeship

part II|100 pages

Ceylon

chapter II|6 pages

Ceylon: The British Occupation

chapter IV|16 pages

The Civil Administration

chapter V|33 pages

Agriculture and Commerce

chapter VI|6 pages

Finance

chapter VII|13 pages

The Judicial Establishment

chapter VIII|8 pages

Religion, Education and Charity

chapter IX|5 pages

Maitland And The Colonial Office

part III|13 pages

The Mastery of The Mediterranean

chapter X|12 pages

The Mastery of The Mediterranean

part IV|48 pages

Malta

chapter XI|4 pages

The Plague

chapter XII|10 pages

The Civil Administration

chapter XIII|10 pages

The Administration of Justice

chapter XIV|17 pages

Agriculture and Commerce

chapter XV|5 pages

Religion and Education

part V|83 pages

The Ionian Islands

chapter XVI|37 pages

The Constitutional Chart

chapter XVII|9 pages

The Religious Establishment

chapter XVIII|4 pages

The Progress of Education

chapter XIX|21 pages

The Economic Prosperity of The Islands

chapter XX|11 pages

Conclusion