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Henry Beveridge (orientalist)

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Henry Beveridge
Born9 February 1837
Died8 November 1929
OccupationOrientalists
SpouseAnnette Akroyd
ChildrenWilliam Beveridge

Henry Beveridge (9 February 1837 – 8 November 1929) was an Indian Civil Service officer and Orientalist in British India.

Life and family

He married Annette Akroyd, one of the first graduates of Bedford College and translator of Persian and Turki texts. The couple had two children: a daughter, Annette Jeanie Beveridge (d. 1956), who married R. H. Tawney,[1] and a son, William Beveridge (1879–1963), a noted economist who gave his name to the report associated with the foundation of the welfare state.[2]

Henry Beveridge lived at Pitfold, Shottermill, Surrey, England and died in 1929.[2]

Works

Translations Works
  • The Tūzuk-i-Jahangīrī Or Memoirs Of Jahāngīr, Alexander Rogers and Henry Beveridge. London, Royal Asiatic Society, 1909–1914.
  • The Akbarnama of Abu-L-Fazl, Vol. I & II, Delhi: Low Price Publications, (1902–39, Reprint 2010). ISBN 81-7536-482-3.
  • The Akbarnama of Abu-L-Fazl, Vol. III, Delhi: Low Price Publications, (1902–39, Reprint 2010). ISBN 81-7536-483-1.
  • The Akbarnama of Abu-L-Fazl, Set of 3 Volumes, Bound in 2, Delhi: Low Price Publications, (1902–39, Reprint 2010). ISBN 81-7536-481-5.

See also

Further reading

  • Fazl, Abul; H. Beveridge (trans.) (1897–1939). The Akbarnama (Vol. I-III). Asiatic Society, Calcutta.

References

  1. ^ Chapter 2 "Courtship and marriage", of The Life of R. H. Tawney: Socialism and History By Lawrence Goldman
  2. ^ a b "Henry Beveridge Genealogy". Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  • William Beveridge, India Called Them, London, 1947;
  • M D Hussain, 19th Century Indian Historical Writing In English, Calcutta, 1992.