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BARNES

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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:barnes:8e8c028f9154
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
6386e9953fa033ea3fc6023743ec25193252ba974be5f15a8aa5aa6353f92d9c
Computed Hash
6386e9953fa033ea3fc6023743ec25193252ba974be5f15a8aa5aa6353f92d9c
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:23
Source URL

Verified Text

barnes, sir edward (1776-1838), british soldier, entered the 47th regiment in 1792, and quickly rose to field rank. he was promoted lieutenant-colonel in 1807, and colonel in 1810, and two years later went to the peninsula to serve on wellington's staff. his services in this capacity gained him further promotion, and as a major-general he led a brigade at vittoria and in the pyrenean battles. he had the cross and three clasps for his peninsula service. as adjutant-general he served in the campaign of 1815 and was wounded at waterloo. already a k.c.b., he now received the austrian order of maria theresa, and the russian order of st anne. in 1819 began his connexion with ceylon, of which island he was governor from 1824 to 1831. he directed the construction of the great military road between colombo and kandy, and of many other lines of communication, made the first census of the population, and introduced coffee cultivation on the west indian system (1824). in 1831 he received the g.c.b., and from 1831 to 1853 he was commander-in-chief in india, with the local rank of general. on his return home, after two unsuccessful attempts to secure the seat, he became m.p. for sudbury in 1837, but he died in the following [v.03 p.0413] year. sir edward barnes' portrait was painted, for ceylon, by john wood, and a memorial statue was erected in colombo.