Azimullah Khan’s full name was
Azimullāh Khān Yūsufzaī. He lost his father as a child and was rescued as a starving Muslim boy from the famine of 1837–38 along with his mother when they were provided shelter at a mission in
Kanpur. There he learnt English and French, which was an achievement for an Indian in the 19th century. After working as secretary to several British officers, he was taken into the service of the
Maratha Peshwa Nana Saheb II, adopted son of the late
Peshwa Baji Rao II, as secretary and advisor. Nana Sahib was involved in an extended appeal to the
British East India Company to pass on to him the £80,000 annual pension that his adoptive father (exiled to the
Bithor) had been granted. While Nana Sahib had inherited Peshwa Baji Rao's property and title, the pension paid by the Company had terminated on the latter's death. Nana Sahib chose Azimullah to lead a delegation to England in 1853 to plead his case with the Board of Control and the British Government. In England, Azimullah was taken under the wing of
Lucie, Lady Duff-Gordon; an intellectual and translator whose husband was a civil servant, court functionary and the cousin of the then Prime Minister. This introduction probably came about through the philosopher
John Stuart Mill, who was an official of the East India Company and had been a childhood friend of Lucie's. Azimullah lodged with the Duff Gordons at their home in
Esher, and in Lucie's company may have met her friends
Dickens,
Carlyle,
Meredith,
Tennyson,
Browning and
Thackeray (though there is no direct evidence). The mission to obtain resumption of the pension for Nana Sahib was unsuccessful and reportedly embittered Azimullah Khan. Azimullah Khan probably died of a fever in late 1859, after the crushing of the rebellion, on the run from the British in the inhospitable border country of the Nepalese
Terai. Other accounts have him dying of smallpox while attempting to reach Calcutta in disguise, or of escaping India and eventually being murdered in Constantinople. Azimullah Avenue, a road in
Kanpur is named in his honour. ==Legacy==