Robert Swinhoe

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Robert Swinhoe

Robert Swinhoe FRS (1 September 1836, Calcutta, India – 28 October 1877, London), was an English naturalist who worked as a Consul in Formosa. He discovered many Southeast Asian birds and several, such as Swinhoe's Pheasant, are named after him.

Biography

Swinhoe was born in Calcutta where his father, who came from a Northumberland family, was a lawyer.[1] There is no clear record of the date of his arrival in England, but it is known he attended the University of London, and in 1854 joined the China consular corps.

He was stationed to the remote port of Amoy, some 300 miles to the northeast of Hong Kong, in 1855. While at this port he mastered not only the Chinese language (both official Mandarin and the local Hokkien). but he also initiated a detailed and authoritative understanding of the ornithology of eastern China. In March, 1856, Swinhoe made an "adventurous" visit to the camphor districts of NW Formosa on board a lorcha, a hybrid vessel utilizing a European hull and Chinese rigging. Whether this was an official or personal visit is unknown, but he made mention of this on several occasions through the rest of his published career. While at Amoy he courted and married Christina Stronach (née Lockie), the daughter of a Scottish missionary, in 1857.

In June and July 1858 Swinhoe participated in the circumnavigation of Formosa on board HMS Inflexible in search of British and American castaways. He served as translator as well in two subsequent British actions against the Chinese in North China in 1858 and 1860, the latter resulting in his book, The North China Campaign of 1860 (London, 1861), his personal account of the Second Opium War.

In 1860 Swinhoe was named as the first European consular representative to the island of Formosa (Taiwan). Delays prevented him from physically obtaining that post until 1861. On 2 July of that year Swinhoe and his assistant, George C. P. Braune, arrived at the prefectural capital, the southern city of Taiwan-fu (today's Tainan City). Shoaling of the harbor at Taiwan-fu prompted him to re-establish the British consulate to the northern port of Tamsui, where the bulk of foreign trade occurred. He published several articles on his first harried days as British representative on Formosa, and as well numerous others on the rich wildlife of this isolated island.

Subsequently he served as consul at Amoy, Ningpo, and Chefoo, all on the mainland of China. He at various times during his career served as 'roving consul' for the British plenipotentiary in China for Great Britain, Rutherford Alcock. His duties in this capacity required an visit to exlore Hainan, as well as a journey up the Yangtze River to Chungking, in Szechuan Province, to help determine steamship navigability of that river. All the while he was stationed at those various postings, he retained the Formosan consulship, and indeed did not relinquish it until his retirement from the service of his government, in 1873. He spent his spare time in China collecting natural history specimens, and as the area had not previously been open to Westerners, many of the items he collected were new to science. As he was primarily an ornithologist, many of his new discoveries were birds, but he also found new fish, mammals and insects. He returned to England in 1862 with his collection. Many of the birds were first described in John Gould's Birds of Asia (1863).[2]

Natural history

At a young age he had been interested in birds and had made a small collection of British birds, nests and eggs. He corresponded with Henry Stevenson and one of his first publications was in 1858, the year in which Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace published their paper on natural selection. Swinhoe took to the ideas of Darwin and in 1872 he named a species (now a subspecies) after Darwin (Pucrasia macrolopha darwini).[2] He was a regular published in The Ibis after 1860 and later to the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London.

During his travels he studied the birds and mammals apart from studying the local culture. He collected both live animals and specimens on his travels and regularly sent them to the London Zoo. The first Pere David's Deer in Europe came from him.[2]

His primary interest was however in birds and on these he corresponded extensively with Edward Blyth. Around 1871 he started suffering from partial paralysis and he moved to the Chefoo which he called the Scarborough of China. He was forced by his ill health to leave China in October 1875. From his home in Chelsea he continued to publish notes and his last publication in the Ibis was the description of a new genus and species of bird Liocichla steerii.[2] He died at the age of 41, presumably of syphilis.[3]

P. L. Sclater described him as one of the most industrious and successful exploring naturalists that have ever lived and after his death, A. R. Wallace wrote due to Mr. Swinhoe's own exertions...there is probably no part of the world (if we except Europe, North America, and British India) of whose warm-blooded vertebrates we possess fuller or more accurate knowledge than we do of the coast districts of China and its islands.[2]

His collection of 3700 specimens was bought by Henry Seebohm and this was subsequently bequeathed to the Liverpool Museum. A number of species were named after Swinhoe, including Swinhoe's Storm-petrel, which he first described himself in 1867, and the Yangtze giant softshell turtle (Rafetus swinhoeii), a specimen of which John Edward Gray received from Swinhoe in 1873.

One of Robert's brothers, Colonel Charles Swinhoe was a founding member of the Bombay Natural History Society in India and an expert on lepidoptera.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Fisher, Clemency Thorne (2004). "Swinhoe, Robert (1836–1877)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/38460. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Hall, Philip B. (1987) Robert Swinhoe (1836-1877): A Victorian Naturalist in Treatyport China. The Geographical Journal 153:37-47
  3. Coates, P. D, The China consuls: British consular officers, 1843-1943 (Hong Kong, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), pp. 498, 500.

External links

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