Everything about Frank Swettenham totally explained
Sir Frank Athelstane Swettenham GCMG CH (
28 March 1850 –
11 June 1946) was the first Resident General of the
Federated Malay States (part of the then Royal Colonies, now independent
Malaysia) which was formed by combining a number of kingdoms. He served from
July 1 1896 to
1901. He was also an amateur photographer. He was born in
Belper,
Derbyshire,
Britain.
He was one of close to forty former British empire officials to actually oppose the
Malayan Union.
He created a dictionary "Vocabulary of the English and Malay languages". He also published two books "Malay Sketches" and "Unaddressed Letters".
Career between 1871 and 1901
Swettenham was a British colonial official in
British Malaya, who was famous as highly influential in shaping British policy and the structure of British administration in the
Malay Peninsula.
In
1871 Swettenham was first sent to
Singapore as a cadet in the civil service of the
Straits Settlements (Singapore, Malacca, and Penang Island). He learned the
Malay language and played a major role as British-Malay intermediary in the events surrounding British intervention in the peninsular Malay states in the 1870s.
He was a member of the Commission for the Pacification of Larut set up following the signing of the
Pangkor Treaty of 1874 and he served alongside
John Frederick Adolphus McNair, and Chinese
Kapitan Chung Keng Quee and Chin Seng Yam. The Commission was successful in freeing many women taken as captives during the Larut Wars (1862–73), getting stockades dismantled and getting the tin mining business going again.
More than a decade later, in
1882, which he was appointed as resident (adviser) to the Malay state of Selangor. In Selangor office, the development of coffee and tobacco estates had successfully promoted by him, while in the meantime, helped boost tin earnings by constructing a railway from Kuala Lumpur (it was capital of Selangor at that time), to the port of Klang, which was later named
Port Swettenham in his honour.
He was attended the federation, along with the title of resident-general after secured an agreement of federation from the states of
Perak,
Selangor,
Negri Sembilan, and
Pahang in
1895, when the time he served as resident of Perak state. In
1897 he was knighted by the King George VI, and in 1901, three years before his retirement, he was granted as high commissioner for the Malay states and governor of the Straits Settlements.
Through Swettenham's huge efforts to convince that the British Foreign Office reversed its policy of accepting
Siamese control of the northern tier of Malay states. His portrayal of their maladministration under native rulers and his warnings of possible intervention by rival
European powers led to
British penetration of those states in the early 1900s.
Chronology
Publication
Burns, P.L., and Cowan, C.D. ed. (1975), 'Sir Frank Swettenham's Malayan journals 1874-1876', Kuala Lumpur, London: Oxford University Press.
Clifford, Hugh Charles, and Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1894), 'A dictionary of the Malay language', Taiping, Perak: Printed for the author's at the Government's printing office.
Cowan, C.D. ed. (1952), 'Sir Frank Swettenham's Perak journals 1874-1876', 'Journal of the Malayan branch of the Royal Asiatic Society', vol.24, part 4. Singapore: Malaya Publishing House.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1881), 'Vocabulary of the English and Malay languages'. Singapore: printed at the Government Printing Office.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1893), 'About Perak'. Singapore: Straits Times Press.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1895), 'Malay sketches'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1898), 'Unaddressed letters'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1899), 'The real Malay'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1907), 'British Malaya'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1910), 'Report of the Mauritius royal commission, 1909'. HMSO.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1912), 'Also and perhaps'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1925), 'Arabella in Africa'. London: John Lane.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1942), 'Footprints in Malaya'. London: Hutchinson.
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1946 ?), 'The future of Malaya'. [S.l.]: [s.n.]
Swettenham, Frank Athelstane (1967), 'Stories and sketches'. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press.Further Information
Get more info on 'Frank Swettenham'.
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