Lena, Lady Login Explained

Lena Login
Birth Name:Lena Campbell
Birth Date:1820
Birth Place:Perth
Death Date:17 April 1904
Death Place:Aylesford
Occupation:Courtier, author
Spouse:Sir John Spencer Login
Children:6
Nationality:Scottish

Lena, Lady Login (Campbell; 1820 – 17 April 1904) was a Scottish courtier and author. She was involved with educating Duleep Singh, deposed maharaja of the Sikh kingdom of the Punjab, when he was still a child, and later with bringing him to the UK. Queen Victoria asked her to look after another exiled Indian noble, Victoria Gouramma, daughter of the deposed ruler of Coorg, and to find her an acceptable husband.

Life

Login was born in Perth in Scotland in 1820. She went to India with her sister and brother-in-law, Major Hope Dick.[1] It was in Lucknow that she married John Spencer Login in 1842.[2] He was the Resident Surgeon at Lucknow, the physician to the court of Oudh and Postmaster General of Oudh.As physician to the Court of Oudh, Login was barred from directly examining women in the zenana.[3] However, here, his wife Lena was able assist in diagnosing the medical conditions.

Their children were depicted in a miniature on ivory by an anonymous Indian artist in 1846. The scene shows their oldest son Edward William Spencer Login (born 1843) on a rocking horse, their daughter Lena Margaret Campbell Login (1845) in a blue dress, and the infant Louisa Marion d’Arcy Login (1846) held by the children's ayah. She and the Indian child in the picture are unidentified.[2] They had six children.[4]

In 1849 her husband was made the guardian to Duleep Singh who was a deposed teenage ruler. Lena became part of his education giving him lessons in expected (British) behaviour. Duleep Singh became a Christian in 1853 and the following year they all went to Britain where her husband was knighted.[4]

In 1858 Queen Victoria asked her to find a suitor for her goddaughter, Victoria Gouramma. There was an expectation that she would be a suitable wife for Duleep Singh who was a deposed member of royalty, but he instead chose to marry Bamba Müller, the daughter of a German merchant and Ethiopian concubine, whom American Presbyterian missionaries had educated in Cairo. Lady Login tried to find a suitable European noble to become Gowramma's husband, but Gowramma married Lt. Col. John Campbell, who was 30 years older.[5]

Login died in Aylesford in 1904.[4] She left memoirs that offer valuable descriptions of her life in India and her interactions with the young Duleep Singh.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Login. Lady. Sir John Login and Duleep Singh. Malleson. Col G. B.. 1978. Atlantic Publishers & Distri. en.
  2. Web site: Children of Sir John Spencer Login in Lucknow in 1846 - Asian and African studies blog. blogs.bl.uk. 2020-03-29.
  3. Book: Login, Lena Campbell. Sir John Login and Duleep Singh. 1890. Normal Publishers and Distributors. New Delhi. 1–14.
  4. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-48644/version/0 Login (née Campbell), Lena, Lady Login.
  5. Login [née Campbell], Lena, Lady Login (1820–1904), courtier]. 2004. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/48644. 2020-03-29.
  6. Book: Login, E. Dalhousie. Lady Login's Recollections: Court Life and Camp Life, 1820-1904. Languages Department, Punjab. 1970. 2nd. Jullundur City.