Rishi Sunak, a GP's son who married an Indian tech billionaire's daughter and built a multi million-pound fortune that saw him dubbed the 'Maharaja of the Dales', has enjoyed a meteoric rise to become Chancellor at the age of just 39.

A graduate of £42,000-per-year Winchester College and Oxford University, where he studied PPE, he is believed to be one of the richest members of Parliament, and lives with his family in a magnificent Georgian manor house in the small village of Kirby Sigston, just outside Northallerton in North Yorkshire.

His Instagram account depicts a sport-loving family man who dotes on the two daughters he shares with his wife, Akshata Murthy, whose father N.R. Narayana Murthy is India's sixth-wealthiest man thanks to his ownership of multinational business technology giant Infosys.

A multi-millionaire in his own right thanks to his investment career, Mr Sunak was known to be close to his former boss Sajid Javid, with the pair joining each other on nights out and sharing Star Wars jokes on Twitter.

And although he has taken the job at Number 11 thanks to the bombshell departure of his former mentor, few at Westminster doubted he would reach the top in the end.

Rishi Sunak, pictured with his wife Akshata Murthy has been promoted to Chancellor - one of the youngest people to hold the post in modern politics

A third-generation Indian immigrant, Mr Sunak's father was an NHS GP and his mother ran a chemist's. He is pictured with his wife, Akshata, and their children

A multi-millionaire in his own right thanks to his investment career, Mr Sunak is even wealthier thanks to his marriage to Murthy, whose father N.R. Narayana Murthy is India's sixth-richest man (pictured, their magnificent Georgian manor in North Yorkshire)

Mr Sunak and Mr Javid seemed to develop something of a 'bromance' at the Treasury. Only in December, Mr Sunak - a big Star Wars fan - tweeted about their outing to see The Rise of Skywalker with a picture of them arm in arm

Mr Sunak has experienced a dizzying rise since taking William Hague’s Yorkshire seat of Richmond at the 2015 general election, which is when he first acquired his 'Maharaja of the Dales' moniker.

His father in law, self-made billionaire Murthy Sr, is a household name in India after making his fortune through consulting giant Infosys.

Mr Sunak is pictured with his family (wife Akshata Murthy is second from right) as the GP's son joins Johnson's cabinet

Akshata herself runs fashion label Akshata Designs and is also a director of a venture capital firm founded by her father in 2010. Her shareholding in Infosys alone is estimated at £185million.

Mr Sunak is a solid media performer, repeatedly offered up by Downing Street for tricky interviews.

Mr Sunak's father-in-law N.R. Narayana Murthy with David Cameron in 2010

The staunch Brexiteer was promoted to Boris Johnson's Cabinet after the dramatic reshuffle in July.

Until now he was Mr Javid's deputy, with the title Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

The two of them seemed to develop something of a 'bromance'. Only in December, Mr Sunak - a big Star Wars fan - tweeted about their outing to see The Rise of Skywalker.

'Great night out with the boss - Jedi Master @sajidjavid,' he tweeted alongside a picture of them arm-in-arm.

Mr Javid returned the praise with another Star Wars reference, writing: 'The force is strong with young Sunak'.

Mr Sunak, who boarded at the £40,000-a-year Winchester College, was born in Southampton and describes his hobbies as 'keeping fit, cricket, football and movies'.

A fan of Southampton FC, he described his childhood hero as footballer Matt Le Tissier.

'One of my prized possessions is an 18th birthday card signed by the entire Saints team, but Matt in the middle there, which I've still got,' Mr Sunak told the BBC in an October 2019 interview.

Mr Sunak, who boarded at the £40,000-a-year Winchester College, was born in Southampton and describes his hobbies as 'keeping fit, cricket, football and movies'

Mr Sunak pictured on Instagram wielding a Super Soaker (left) and cooking up a barbecue

Mr Sunak is married to Akshata Murthy, whose father N.R. Narayana Murthy is India's sixth-wealthiest man

While building the hedge fund he spent a couple of days doing voluntary work for the Conservatives. He then decided he would like to go into politics full-time

Mr Sunak cuddling up to a dog in a photo posted on Instagram, which depicts a sport-loving family man

After Oxford Mr Sunak he studied at California's Stanford University where he met Akshata (both are pictured)

A third-generation Indian immigrant, Mr Sunak's father was an NHS GP and his mother ran a chemist's.

After Oxford he studied at California's Stanford University where he met Akshata.

The couple married in her home city of Bangalore in 2009 in a two-day ceremony attended by 1,000 guests.

After the couple returned to Britain, Sunak worked for a London hedge fund before setting up his own business, Theleme Partners, in 2010, with an initial fund of $700million.

Writing on his website, Mr Sunak said his business experience had taught him the importance of entrepreneurship.

'From working in my mum's tiny chemist shop to my experience building large businesses, I have seen first-hand how politicians should support free enterprise and innovation to ensure our future prosperity,' he said.

While building the hedge fund he spent a couple of days doing voluntary work for the Conservatives. He then decided he would like to go into politics full-time.

He has also been a school governor, a board member of a large youth club and a volunteer in education programmes.

When Mr Sunak went canvassing for the first time his Richmond seat, which has a relatively small ethnic minority population, one sheep farmer reportedly said: 'Nice to meet you. I see you've got a better sun tan than William Hague.'

A third-generation Indian immigrant, Mr Sunak's father was an NHS GP and his mother ran a chemist's

The new Chancellor of the Exchequer is pictured with his wife, Akshata, and their two children during a Santa run

The couple married in her home city of Bangalore in 2009 in a two-day ceremony attended by 1,000 guests

Mr Sunak has praised his his father-in-law's favourite saying: 'In God we trust — but everyone else needs to bring data to the table.'

He has previously spoken about how his Asian identity matters to him, telling the BBC: 'I'm a first generation immigrant. My parents emigrated here, so you've got this generation of people who are born here, their parents were not born here, and they've come to this country to make a life.

'In terms of cultural upbringing, I'd be at the temple at the weekend - I'm a Hindu - but I'd also be at the Saints game as well on a Saturday - you do everything, you do both.'

He said he had been 'fortunate' not to have to endure much racism when he was young, but said there was 'one incident that sticks in my head'.

'I was just out with my younger brother and younger sister, and I think, probably pretty young, I was probably a mid-teenager, and we were out at a fast food restaurant and I was just looking after them. There were people sitting nearby, it was the first time I'd experienced it, just saying some very unpleasant things. The 'P' word.'

He said he 'couldn't conceive' of the incident happening in today's Britain.