Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Purves Phayre, GCMG, KCSI, CB (7 May 1812 – 14 December 1885) was a career British Indian Army officer who was the first Commissioner of British Burma, 1862–1867, Governor of Mauritius, 1874–1878, and author.
Related to Lt Gen Sir Robert Phayre, also served in India; part of Phayre family, of which Lt Col Robert Phayre, who served the British administration in Ireland in 1600s, also signed death warrant of Charles 1.
Descendants: Colonel Robert Bernard Phayre MC Queens Own Ghurkas, son Colonel Robin Desmond Phayre RA, son Lt Col Robin Phayre LI, cousin Col Terence Phayre Knott MC RM, of whom son Captain Robert Knott AAC changed name by deed poll to Phayre, to prevent family name dying out, lives in Kenya.
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Phayre was born in Shrewsbury and educated at Shrewsbury School. He joined the Indian Army in 1828. In 1846 he was appointed assistant to the commissioner of the province of Tenasserim, Burma, and in 1849 he was made commissioner of Arakan. After the Second Anglo-Burmese War (1852), he became commissioner of Pegu. He was made a Brevet Captain in 1854 and in 1862 he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel.
In 1862 Phayre was made commissioner for the entire province of British Burma. He left Burma in 1867.
He served as 12th Governor of Mauritius from 21 Sep 1874 to 31 Dec 1878.[1]
He was appointed a CB in 1864, promoted to Colonel in 1866 and was knighted with the KCSI in 1867. In 1871, he was promoted to Major-General and was promoted to Lieutenant-General in 1873. He retired to Bray in Ireland and was appointed a GCMG in 1878.
Phayre wrote the first standard History of Burma (1883). He is commemorated in the names of a number of animals, including:
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by first incumbent |
Chief Commissioner of British Crown Colony of Burma 1862–1867 |
Succeeded by Albert Fytche |
Preceded by Arthur Hamilton-Gordon |
Governor of Mauritius 1874–1878 |
Succeeded by Sir George Bowen |