Francis Light (born c. 1740, Suffolk, Eng.—died Oct. 21, 1794, Penang Island [now in Malaysia]) was a British naval officer who was responsible for acquiring Penang (Pinang) Island in the Strait of Malacca as a British naval base.
Light served in the Royal Navy from 1759 until 1763. In command of a merchant ship, he went in 1771 to the northern Malay state of Kedah, where he won the confidence of the sultan, Mohammed. About that time England, at war with France, was looking for a suitable naval outpost along the Malay Peninsula. By March 1786 the East India Company, apparently at Light’s urging, settled on Penang as the site. Light conducted the negotiations with Mohammed’s son, Sultan Abdullah of Kedah, who was threatened by the powerful states of Siam (Thailand) and Myanmar (Burma). Abdullah agreed to English occupation in exchange for support against other Southeast Asian powers.
Penang was annexed on Aug. 11, 1786, but the British allowed Siam to take over control of Kedah early in the 19th century. Light governed the settlement, which was declared a free port. His generous land grants and encouragement of trade attracted a number of immigrants, particularly Chinese, and the area soon prospered.