Rudyard Kipling Biography - Facts, Childhood, Family Life & Achievements of English Poet
Sebastian Wright
Updated on January 17, 2026
Rudyard Kipling Biography
(Journalist, Poet & Novelist)Birthday: December 30, 1865 (Capricorn)
Born In: Mumbai, India
Advanced SearchJoseph Rudyard Kipling was an English poet, short story writer and a novelist, chiefly remembered for his works for children and support for British imperialism. Born in British India in the middle of the nineteenth century, he was sent to England at the age of six for his education. Later he returned to India to begin his career as a journalist, but soon gave it up to return to his home country, where he concentrated full time on writing. After his marriage he lived for some years in Vermont, USA, before returning for good to England. He was a prolific writer whose children’s books are revered as classics of children’s literature. It is believed that at one point he was offered poet laureateship and on several occasions considered for knighthood, but he refused them. However, he accepted the Nobel Prize in Literature, which made him the first English writer to receive the honor.
Quick FactsBritish Celebrities Born In December
Also Known As: Joseph Rudyard Kipling
Died At Age: 70
Family:Spouse/Ex-: Caroline Starr Balestier (m. 1892), Caroline Starr Balestier (m. 1892)
father: John Lockwood Kipling
mother: Alice Kipling (née MacDonald)
siblings: Alice Kipling
children: Elsie Kipling, John Kipling, Josephine Kipling
Born Country: England
Quotes By Rudyard Kipling Nobel Laureates In Literature
Died on: January 18, 1936
place of death: London, England
More Factseducation: United Services College
awards: 1907 - Nobel Prize in Literature
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British CelebritiesPoetsNovelistsJournalistsShort Story Writers Childhood & Early LifeJoseph Rudyard Kipling was born on 30 December 1865 in Bombay (Mumbai), then under British India. His parents named him after the Rudyard Lake in Staffordshire, where they had met for the first time.His father, John Lockwood Kipling, was a sculptor and pottery designer from North Yorkshire. After his marriage to Alice MacDonald, the daughter of Reverend George Browne MacDonald, they moved to India where he was appointed a professor of architectural sculpture in the Jeejeebhoy School of Art.Rudyard had a sister, also named Alice, three years junior to him. Like most other British children in India, they spent the greater part of the day with Indian nannies and servants, listening to the unforgettable stories they told in their native tongue and exploring local markets with them.As a result, Rudyard became more proficient in their language than in English. But all these changed abruptly in 1871, when both the siblings were sent to live in a foster home in England to be educated under the British system.Arriving in England in October, they put up with Captain Pryse Agar Holloway and his wife Sarah, who boarded children of British nationals serving in India in their home at Southsea, Portsmouth. Here he was admitted to a school, but found it hard to adjust. Life at the foster home was not easy either.He not only faced cruelty and neglect at the hands of Mrs. Holloway, but every night she cross-examined him on his day’s activities and to save himself, he started telling lies. Later, he jokingly said, “this, I presume, is the foundation of my literary effort".His only break came, when each Christmas he traveled to London to spend the holidays with his maternal aunt. Besides, he tried to find solace in literature, an activity not encouraged by Mrs. Holloway. Therefore, to mislead her he moved the furniture along the floor as he continued reading.By 1876, eleven-year-old Kipling was almost on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Fortunately his mother was informed about this and in April 1877, she arrived in England to take away her children from the foster home. Much later in 1888, he wrote about his ordeal in ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep.’In January 1878, Kipling was admitted to the United Services College, a boarding school at Westward Ho in Devon. Here he had to endure harsh discipline as well as bullying, but later developed close friendship with other boys, sharing practical jokes and pranks.He also developed a good relationship with the headmaster, who encouraged him to write and made him the editor of the school magazine. In 1881, the poems he wrote for the magazine was published by his father as ‘Schoolboy Lyrics.’On the completion of his schooling, he returned to India sometime in October 1882. That was because he was neither academically bright enough to get scholarships, nor could his parents afford university education.