,
Valletta, Malta. in
Corfu. Maitland became
Lieutenant-Governor of Portsmouth and General Officer Commanding
South-West District in May 1813 and was then appointed as
Governor of Malta on 23 July, when the island became a
crown colony instead of a
protectorate. The
plague had
broken out in Malta in March 1813 and the disease began to spread especially in
Valletta and the
Grand Harbour area. Maitland arrived on the island on 3 October 1813 and took his oath of office on 5 October. Once in post, he enforced stricter quarantine measures. The plague spread to Gozo by the following January, but the islands were free of the disease by March 1814. Overall, 4486 people were killed which amounted to 4% of the total population. It is thought that the outbreak would have been worse without Maitland's strict actions. After the eradication of the plague, Maitland made several reforms. He removed British troops from
Lampedusa on 25 September 1814, ending the
dispute that had started in 1800. On Malta, he was autocratic and he refused to form an advisory council made up of Maltese representatives, and so he was informally known as "King Tom". He formed the
Malta Police Force in 1814, while the local Italian-speaking
Università was dissolved in 1819. Various reforms were undertaken in taxation and the law courts as well. Maitland remained Governor until his death from
apoplexy on 17 January 1824. He was attended on his death-bed by doctors Robert Grieves, Alexander Broadfoot and
John Hennen. While he was Governor of Malta, Maitland also served as
Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands during 1815 to 1823, while the islands were a British protectorate. The seat of administration was at
Corfu, where he was represented by
Sir Frederick Hankey, his private secretary. The neoclassical
Maitland Monument was built there in his honour in 1821. ==Citations==