Sir Hudson Lowe

Sir Hudson Lowe, engraving

Sir Hudson Lowe (born July 28, 1769, Galway, County Galway, Ire.—died Jan. 10, 1844, London, Eng.) was a British general, governor of St. Helena when Napoleon I was held captive there; he was widely criticized for his unbending treatment of the former emperor.

Lowe held several important commands in the war with France from 1793. He was knighted in 1814. He arrived on the island of St. Helena, Napoleon’s last place of exile, in April 1816. Many persons, notably the duke of Wellington, considered the choice ill advised, for Lowe was a conscientious but unimaginative man who took his responsibility with excessive seriousness. Overwhelmed by the magnitude of the charge given him, Lowe adhered rigorously to orders and treated Napoleon with extreme punctiliousness. After October 1816, the news that rescue operations were being planned by Bonapartists in the United States caused Lowe to impose even stricter regulations. The next month he deported the comte de Las Cases, Napoleon’s confidant and former imperial chamberlain, for writing letters about Lowe’s severity.

When, late in 1817, Napoleon first showed symptoms of his fatal illness, Lowe did nothing to mitigate the emperor’s living conditions. Yet Lowe recommended that the British government increase its allowance to Napoleon’s household by one-half. After the emperor’s death (May 5, 1821), Lowe returned to England, where he received the thanks of King George IV but was met with generally unfavourable opinion. He later commanded the British forces on Ceylon (1825–30) but was not appointed governor of that island when the office fell vacant in 1830.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.