Monier Williams taught Asian languages at the
East India Company College from 1844 until 1858 when
company rule in India ended after the
1857 rebellion. He came to national prominence during the
1860 election campaign for the
Boden Chair of Sanskrit at
Oxford University, in which he stood against
Max Müller. The vacancy followed the death of
Horace Hayman Wilson in 1860. Wilson had started the university's collection of
Sanskrit manuscripts upon taking the chair in 1831, and had indicated his preference that Williams should be his successor. The campaign was notoriously acrimonious. Müller was known for his liberal religious views and his philosophical speculations based on his reading of Vedic literature. Monier Williams was seen as a less brilliant scholar, but had a detailed practical knowledge of India itself, and of actual religious practices in modern Hinduism. Müller, in contrast, had never visited India. Both candidates had to emphasise their support for Christian evangelisation in India, since that was the basis on which the professorship had been funded by its founder. Monier Williams' dedication to Christianisation was not doubted, unlike Müller's. In his book
Hinduism, published by
SPCK in 1877, he predicted the demise of the Hindu religion and called for Christian evangelism to ward off the spread of Islam. while David N. Lorenzen cites the book along with
India, and India Missions: Including Sketches of the Gigantic System of Hinduism, Both in Theory and Practice : Also Notices of Some of the Principal Agencies Employed in Conducting the Process of Indian Evangelization. ==Writings and foundations==