Richard Olaf Winstedt, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Richard Olaf Winstedt

British orientalist

Date of Birth: 02-Aug-1878

Place of Birth: Oxford, England, United Kingdom

Date of Death: 02-Jun-1966

Profession: author, university teacher

Nationality: United Kingdom

Zodiac Sign: Leo


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About Richard Olaf Winstedt

  • Sir Richard Olaf Winstedt (2 August 1878 – 2 June 1966), or more commonly R.
  • O.
  • Winstedt, was an English Orientalist and colonial administrator with expertise in British Malaya. Winstedt was born in Oxford and educated at Magdalen College School and New College, Oxford, from which he received an MA.
  • His brother was Eric Otto Winstedt, a Latinist and gypsiologist. In 1902 he became a cadet in the Federated Malay States Civil Service, and was posted to Perak where he studied Malay language and culture.
  • In 1913 he was appointed District Officer in Kuala Pilah, and in 1916 appointed to the Education Department.
  • In 1920 he received his DLitt degree from Oxford.
  • He married Sarah Winstedt, a physician and surgeon with the Colonial Medical Service whom he had met in Kuala Pilah, in 1921. He served as the first President of Raffles College, Singapore, 1928–1931.
  • During his presidency, he also served as acting Secretary to the High Commissioner, 1923, Director of Education for Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States (FMS), as a member of Legislative Council, Straits Settlements, 1924–1931 and as a member of the FMS Federal Council, 1927–1931.
  • He was president of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1927, 1929 and 1931.
  • After a term as General Adviser to Johore, 1931–1935, Winstedt retired from the Malayan Civil Service. He returned to England and was appointed Lecturer, then Reader, and ultimately Honorary Fellow, in Malay at the School of Oriental Studies in London, where he also served as a member of the Governing Body, 1939–1959.
  • During World War II, he broadcast in Malay to Japanese-occupied Malaya.
  • He retired from active teaching in 1946. Winstedt served on numerous boards and advisory groups, most notably at the Royal Asiatic Society in London, of which he was repeatedly the president and a Gold Medallist in 1947.
  • Other organisations included the Association of British Malaya, of which he was president in 1938, the Colonial Office Advisory Committee on Education, 1936–1939, and the Royal India Society.
  • He was a Fellow of the British Academy, an Honorary Member of the Southeast Asia Institute, the Royal Batavian Society, and the Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde.

Read more at Wikipedia