Nicholas Tarling
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article does not cite any references or sources. (July 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
This article is orphaned as few or no other articles link to it. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (November 2006) |
Nicholas Tarling was born in 1931 and received his secondary education at St Albans School. As an undergraduate at Christ's College, Cambridge, he was supervised by, among others, the late Sir John Plumb. He also earned his PhD at Cambridge, supervised by Dr Victor Purcell.
In 1957 he took up a teaching post at The University of Queensland in Gordon Greenwood's Department of History and Political Science. There, he taught courses in both European and Asian history. During those years he visited Southeast Asia and the US, and published three books: a revised version of his thesis, Anglo-Dutch Relations in the Malay World and Piracy and Politics in the Malay World.
In 1965 he was appointed Associate Professor of History at The University of Auckland New Zealand, and in 1968 he became a full-time professor, still as a European and Asian history teacher. That position he continued to hold until he reached the then mandatory retirement age at the end of 1996. For much of the time he was also Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Chairman of the Deans Committee, and Assistant or Deputy Vice-Chancellor. He also served on a number of inter-university and government committees.
He was the founder and president of the New Zealand Asian Studies Society [NZASIA] and also had two terms as President of the Association of University Teachers of New Zealand. His interest in the arts led to his appointment to Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council, to the chairmanship of the Symphonia of Auckland, to a directorship of Opera New Zealand. He was a busy amateur actor and served for many years as University Orator.
In retirement he has been a Fellow of the New Zealand Asia Institute and served for a while as Director of the Institute and later of the International Office. He was also a visiting Professor at UBD and honorary professor at University of Hull.
He was awarded the Cambridge Litt D in 1974 and given an honorary Litt D by the University of Auckland in 1996, when he was also made Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM).
He has published some 36 books. Those in Asian history include Britain, the Brookes and Brunei (1971), Sulu and Sabah (1978), The Burthen, The Risk and the Glory (1982), and The Fourth Anglo-Burman War (1987).
He also edited the Cambridge History of Southeast Asia. In retirement he has completed a trilogy on British policy in Southeast Asia during the Pacific War, the Cold War and the Korean War, and also published a book on the Japanese interregnum, A Sudden Rampage. A second trilogy, on imperialism, nationalism and regionalism in Southeast Asia, is almost complete. He has also published books on university policy, including one on overseas students, and on opera.
[edit] Selected publications
- Tarling, Nicholas. Historians and Southeast Asian historyAuckland, N.Z.: New Zealand Asia Institute, University of Auckland, c2000. ISBN 0908689667 (pbk.)
- Tarling, Nicholas. Sulu and Sabah : a study of British policy towards the Philippines and North Borneo from the late eighteenth century Kuala Lumpur ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1978.ISBN 019580337X