A. Berriedale Keith

Arthur Berriedale Keith (1879–1944) was a Scottish constitutional lawyer, scholar of Sanskrit and Indologist. He became Regius Professor of Sanskrit and Lecturer in Constitutional History in the University of Edinburgh.

Contents

Biography

The third son of a newsagent in Edinburgh, and brother of the administrator in Burma Sir William John Keith, Arthur Berriedale Keith was educated at the Royal High School and the University of Edinburgh before going on to Balliol College, Oxford. Top in the civil service exam of 1901, with marks never bettered, he served in the Colonial Office from 1901 to 1914, with a break at the Crown Agents between 1903 and 1905.

He helped set up the Dominions division of the CO in 1907 and organize the 1911 Imperial Conference, and rose to be private secretary to the Permanent Under-Secretary.He was called to the English bar in his spare time. Was appointed to the Regius Chair of Sanskrit in 1914. He made great contributions to Vedic and classical Sanskrit scholarship, and was called in to advise the Government during the abdication crisis in 1936. He wrote twenty-one books on Commonwealth history with even more on philology and law.

A biography was penned on Berriedale by Ridgway (Jr.) Shinn titled "The Chief Ornament of Scottish Learning", narrating and analyzing "the achievements and failures on one of leading authorities on the constitution of the British Empire". [1]

After his death his sister gifted to the University of Edinburgh Library his books and papers on Sanskrit and the history and law of India and the British Empire as the Arthur Berridale Keith Collection.

Works

Constitutional law and history

Indian culture and literature

Translations

References