Richard Keigwin

British officer
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Died:
June 21, 1690, Saint Kitts

Richard Keigwin (died June 21, 1690, Saint Kitts) was an English naval officer and military commander of the East India Company, prominent as the leader of “Keigwin’s Rebellion” against the company in Bombay (Mumbai) in 1683.

On May 4, 1673, as a lieutenant aboard the HMS Assistance, Keigwin led the English assault on the Dutch-held island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean. His landing place is still known as Keigwin’s Rock. In 1676 he went to Bombay as a free merchant but soon entered the East India Company’s service. He became a commandant, and in 1679 he distinguished himself in battle against the Maratha navy, but his refusal to reduce the Bombay regiment and disband the cavalry, despite orders from the company’s headquarters in London, led to his recall.

Keigwin returned to Bombay as a captain lieutenant and a member of the company’s governing council. Continued bad relations with the company, however, resulted in his eventual exclusion from the council, and in December 1683 he headed a revolt against company rule. For nearly a year he ruled Bombay vigorously in the king’s name, but finally, in November 1684, after obtaining a free pardon for himself and his followers, he surrendered the island-city to the company on the king’s orders. He returned to England in 1685. As commanding officer of the HMS Assistance, he was killed while leading the assault on Basseterre, Saint Kitts, in the Leeward Islands.

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