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First Published in 1967. History of the Indian Archipelago,
contains an account from 1820, on the manner, arts, languages,
religions, institutions and commerce of its inhabitants.
Trained as a doctor, John Crawfurd (1783 1868) went on to have a
distinguished career in colonial administration with the East India
Company. He held senior posts in Java from 1811 to 1816, including
that of resident at the court of Yogyakarta. A talented linguist
and ethnologist, Crawfurd acquired a sound knowledge of ancient
Kawi and contemporary Javanese. Upon his return to Britain in 1817,
he became a fellow of the Royal Society and published this
three-volume work on the Indonesian islands, principally Java, to
great acclaim. Following further service abroad, he published
accounts of his various missions in south-east Asia and an
encyclopaedic sequel to the present work (all of which are reissued
in the Cambridge Library Collection). Volume 2 examines language,
literature, religion, and history, and the impact of Islam,
Christianity and European colonisation.
Trained as a doctor, John Crawfurd (1783 1868) went on to have a
distinguished career in colonial administration with the East India
Company. He held senior posts in Java from 1811 to 1816, including
that of resident at the court of Yogyakarta. A talented linguist
and ethnologist, Crawfurd acquired a sound knowledge of ancient
Kawi and contemporary Javanese. Upon his return to Britain in 1817,
he became a fellow of the Royal Society and published this
three-volume work on the Indonesian islands, principally Java, to
great acclaim. Following further service abroad, he published
accounts of his various missions in south-east Asia and an
encyclopaedic sequel to the present work (all of which are reissued
in the Cambridge Library Collection). Volume 1 examines the
character and manners of the islanders as well as their arts,
sciences, medicine, and agricultural techniques.
Trained as a doctor, John Crawfurd (1783 1868) went on to have a
distinguished career in colonial administration with the East India
Company. He held senior posts in Java from 1811 to 1816, including
that of resident at the court of Yogyakarta. A talented linguist
and ethnologist, Crawfurd acquired a sound knowledge of ancient
Kawi and contemporary Javanese. Upon his return to Britain in 1817,
he became a fellow of the Royal Society and published this
three-volume work on the Indonesian islands, principally Java, to
great acclaim. Following further service abroad, he published
accounts of his various missions in south-east Asia and an
encyclopaedic sequel to the present work (all of which are reissued
in the Cambridge Library Collection). Volume 3 examines political
institutions and commerce, covering major exports and imports along
with demographics, public revenue and laws.
Orientalist and colonial administrator John Crawfurd (1783 1868)
published this work in 1856. He went to Calcutta as an assistant
surgeon in the East India Company, then moved into administration,
accompanying political missions to Java, Bali and Celebes, and
heading missions to Siam, Vietnam and Burma. Retiring to England in
1828, Crawfurd became a Fellow of the Royal Society and President
of the Ethnological Society. Having studied ancient Kawi,
contemporary Javanese and the Malay language, he published
extensively on Asia in his lifetime, including his History of the
Indian Archipelago, a Malay-language dictionary, and accounts of
missions to the courts of Siam, Cochin-China and Ava. This work
focuses primarily on Java, Malay, Siam and the Philippines. A
monumental account of the culture, politics, language and geography
of the region, organised as encyclopedic entries, it remains an
invaluable source of information on the Victorian presentation and
understanding of South-East Asia.
After studying medicine at Edinburgh, John Crawfurd (1783 1868)
joined the medical service of the East India Company. While posted
at Penang, he studied the Malay language and culture and became an
expert in Eastern affairs. His talent was recognised by the British
Government, which entrusted to him both administrative and
diplomatic responsibilities. He was sent as an envoy on many
missions, most notably to the Court of Siam (Thailand) where his
efforts led to a possibility of opening up the diplomatic relations
between the two countries, troubled since the seventeenth century.
In 1827, he was sent on his last diplomatic assignment in the
service of the East India Company, to the Court of Ava (then the
capital of present-day Myanmar (Burma)). This 1829 work describes
his experiences at Ava, and provided a reference source for
subsequent missions. The appendix contains several relevant
official communiqu s.
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