Robert Caesar Childers (1838 – July 25, 1876) was a British Orientalist scholar, compiler of the first Pāli-English dictionary. Childers was the husband of Anna Barton of Ireland. He was the father of Irish nationalist Robert Erskine Childers and grandfather to the fourth President of Ireland, Erskine Hamilton Childers.
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He was born in Nice, France, to English parents. In 1857; at the age of nineteen, he studied Hebrew at Wadham College, Oxford; graduating in 1861.[1] After some travels in Ireland, he soon ended up married to Anna Barton of Glendalough House.[2] The Barton's of Wicklow,[2][3] Ireland were a very wealthy and respected family in Irish farming and politics.
He then moved to Sri Lanka for an official position in the Ceylon civil service. During this period he studied Sinhalese culture, particularly the Pali language. In 1869 he published the first Pali text in Britain, and began to work on a Pali dictionary, which was published 1872-75,.[4][5]
In 1872 he was appointed sub-librarian at the India Office, and in the following year he became the first professor of Pali and Buddhist literature at University College, London.
In 1876 Childers' dictionary was awarded the Volney prize by the Institute of France. He died in London the same year.[3] He is buried in Highgate Cemetery, London.