H. Nelson Wright

Last updated

Henry Nelson Wright (1869-1941) was a British civil servant in India and a numismatist, specialising in Indian numismatics, for which he is best known. [1]

Contents

Early life and education

Henry Nelson Wright was born on 29 October 1869 in Mainpuri, India, [2] the third son of Francis Nelson Wright, a member of the Indian Civil Service who had been a King's Scholar at Eton. Henry followed his father’s path in education and choice of career, entering Eton on a King’s Scholarship where he was a sporting as well as academic success, playing the Wall Game. [3] He took the Indian Civil Service entrance exam while still at Eton, competing against candidates who had already obtained university degrees, and passed out near the top. [4] He then went as an Exhibitioner to Corpus Christi College, Oxford where he spent two years reading Classics. [5]

Career

In September 1890 Henry sailed for India and took up his first posting at Meerut, in the North West Provinces as Assistant Magistrate and Collector. In 1896 he received the significant promotion to Under Secretary to the Government. In 1899, after nine months home leave, he was promoted to Director of Land Records and Agriculture and Joint Secretary to the Board of Revenue and then in 1901 to be Registrar at the High Court in Allahabad. He spent his entire career in India, except for a period in London from 1917 - 1919 working at the India Office after which he returned to India and was appointed as Judge First Grade at the High Court in Bareilly. He retired in 1925. [6]

Personal life and family

In 1892 Henry married Edith Stuckey – a relative of the Somerset banking dynasty who founded Stuckeys Bank. They had four children, Isola, whose son-in-law was Major-General Roy Urquhart of Arnhem, Harcourt, Trevor and Innes. Harcourt, also a King's Scholar of Eton, [7] [8] [9] was named after his godfather, Henry’s great friend Sir Spencer Harcourt Butler who married his sister Florence and subsequently became Governor of Burma and the United Provinces. Edith died of cancer on 13 December 1917. Six months later, in September 1918, Harcourt was killed on the Western Front, aged 19. [10] In 1919 Henry remarried Minnie Barnes (known as Madge) whom he had met while in London and went back to India with her, where a daughter Alison was born. On retirement, he returned to England where he died of cancer on 13 May 1941.

Numismatics

He became a member of the Asiatic Society of Calcutta in 1894 and grew interested in Indian coins. Appointed the Society’s secretary, he began editing the Supplements to its Journal and in 1902 edited the first supplement devoted to Numismatics. Seeing that coin collecting was being ‘perused haphazardly by individuals, mostly government officers’ he took it upon himself to bring in more organisation and called a conference at his house in Allahabad in December 1910. Henry began focusing on the coins of the Mughal Empire in India and published his first book The Sultans of Delhi in 1907. [11] He was also founding member of the Numismatic Society of India whose first meeting was held in his house in Allahabad. The Society is still in existence and awards an annual Nelson Wright Medal for academic work in Numismatics.

After 1919 his main concentration was coins - sorting collections and producing catalogues at the museums in Calcutta, Delhi, Lucknow. On retirement, he bought a house at Upper Warlingham. The Larches was chosen for its proximity to London and the British Museum where he spent his time studying and sorting the Islamic coins.

In addition to Islamic coins which he collected which can be seen in the Delhi Museum and other museums with coin collections in India, he gave his own collection to the British Museum in 1939 where his Islamic and Gupta coins can presently be seen.

He was a Fellow of the Royal Numismatic Society, and a founder member of the Indian Numismatic Society, and both societies recognized his contribution to the field by awarding him gold medals. The Numismatic Society of India now awards the Nelson Wright Medal for academic work in numismatics. [12]

Awards and honours

Publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Numismatics</span> Study of currencies, coins and paper money

Numismatics is the study or collection of currency, including coins, tokens, paper money, medals and related objects.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vasudeva I</span> Kushan emperor from c.191 to c.232

Vāsudeva I was a Kushan emperor, last of the "Great Kushans." Named inscriptions dating from year 64 to 98 of Kanishka's era suggest his reign extended from at least 191 to 232 CE. He ruled in Northern India and Central Asia, where he minted coins in the city of Balkh (Bactria). He probably had to deal with the rise of the Sasanians and the first incursions of the Kushano-Sasanians in the northwest of his territory.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Prinsep</span> English scholar, orientalist and antiquary (1799–1840)

James Prinsep was an English scholar, orientalist and antiquary. He was the founding editor of the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal and is best remembered for deciphering the Kharosthi and Brahmi scripts of ancient India. He studied, documented and illustrated many aspects of numismatics, metallurgy, meteorology apart from pursuing his career in India as an assay master at the mint in Benares.

Robert Andrew Glendinning Carson, FBA was a British numismatist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Royal Numismatic Society</span> Organization

The Royal Numismatic Society (RNS) is a learned society and charity based in London, United Kingdom which promotes research into all branches of numismatics. Its patron as of 2022 was Queen Elizabeth II.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Praful Thakkar</span> Indian collector (born 1940)

Praful Thakkar is an Indian collector of autographs, philately, First Day Covers (FDCs), coins, medals, tokens, badges, badge plates and other collectibles from India. He has written several books on his hobbies.

Derek Fortrose Allen was Secretary of the British Academy from 1969 to 1973 and Treasurer of that organisation from 1973 until his death.

Sir Edward Clive Bayley, was an Anglo-Indian civil servant, statesman and archæologist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joe Cribb</span> British numismatist (born 1947)

Joe Cribb is a numismatist, specialising in Asian coinages, and in particular on coins of the Kushan Empire. His catalogues of Chinese silver currency ingots, and of ritual coins of Southeast Asia were the first detailed works on these subjects in English. With David Jongeward he published a catalogue of Kushan, Kushano-Sasanian and Kidarite Hun coins in the American Numismatic Society New York in 2015. In 2021 he was appointed Adjunct Professor of Numismatics at Hebei Normal University, China.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barclay V. Head</span>

Barclay Vincent Head was a British numismatist and keeper of the Department of Coins and Medals at the British Museum.

Agnes Baldwin Brett was an American numismatist and archaeologist who worked as the Curator at the American Numismatic Society from 1910 to 1913. She was the first paid curator at the American Numismatic Society. She made important contributions to the study of ancient coinage, medals, and sculpture, whose work was used by later archaeologists. Brett was also a visiting lecturer of archaeology at Columbia University in 1936.

The Medal of the Royal Numismatic Society was first awarded in 1883. It is awarded by the Royal Numismatic Society and is one of the highest markers of recognition given to numismatists. The president and Council award the medal annually to an "individual highly distinguished for services to Numismatic Science".

John Allan, was a British numismatist and scholar of Sanskrit. Allan was a noted numismatist and produced the first systematic study of the coins the Gupta Empire, which remains a standard reference today.

Richard Bertram Whitehead, usually cited as R. B. Whitehead, was a British numismatist and an authority on Indian coins. He played "a major role in establishing the study of coinage as an essential technique of Indian historical research", for which he received numerous awards and honours, and was the first Honorary Fellow of the Numismatic Society of India.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aquilla Smith</span> Irish doctor and numismatist

Aquilla Smith was a highly regarded medical doctor, numismatist and archaeologist. He represented the Irish College of Physicians on the General Medical Council for almost forty years, and was an authority on Irish numismatics.

A numismatist is a specialist, researcher, and/or well-informed collector of numismatics/coins. Numismatists can include collectors, specialist dealers, and scholar-researchers who use coins in object-based research. Although use of the term numismatics was first recorded in English in 1799, people had been collecting and studying coins long before then all over the world.

Silk Road Numismatics is a special field within Silk Road studies and within numismatics. It is particularly important because it covers a part of the world where history is not always clear – either because the historical record is incomplete or is contested. For example, numismatics has played a central role in determining the chronology of the Kushan kings.

The Parkes Weber Prize is a prize awarded annually by the Royal Numismatic Society for original research relating to numismatics by a young scholar under the age of thirty.

George Cyril Brooke (1884–1934) was a British numismatist, specialising in the coins of England.

References

  1. Hugh Pagan, "Record of Members and Fellows" in R.A.G. Carson, A History of the Royal Numismatic Society (Sotheby's/RNS, 1986), p. 75.
  2. "Births, Marriages and Deaths - Births". Allen's Indian Mail. 27: 1153. 1 December 1869. Retrieved 6 February 2024. WRIGHT - At Mynpoorie, Oct. 29, wife of F. N. Wright, C.S., son
  3. Eton Register Part V 1883-1889. compiled for the Old Etonian Association. p. 48b Image 82 of 174. Retrieved 11 March 2023. Upper School Fifth Form - Upper Division Wright HENRY NELSON. (K.S., E.D.S. & J.C.) Son of F. N. W. of the Bengal Civil Service; 1883 /3 -1888 /2 ; Coll. Wall 1886-7 ; Mixed Wall 1887 ; Exhibnr. of C.C.C. Oxf.; Indian Civil Service: Registrar of the High Court, Allahabad, India; m. Edith M., d. of G. Stuckey. Firwood, Clevedon, Somerset.
  4. "THE PAST SCHOOL-TIME". Eton College Chronicle (481): 1. 4 October 1888. Retrieved 4 February 2024. In the Indian Civil Examination, Wright, K. S. passed 22nd straight from Eton.
  5. Joseph Foster. Oxford Men and their Colleges 1880-1892, with a record of their schools, honours and degrees. p. 674. Wright, Henry Nelson, born in Manipuri, East Indies 1870; 1 s. Francis Nelson, of Indian C.S. CORPUS CHRISTI, matric. 20 Oct 88, aged 18 (from Eton); assist. magistrate N.W. provinces, India, 90
  6. "RECORD OF SERVICES - WRIGHT, Henry Nelson Indian C.S. (retd)". The India Office and Burma Office List: 874. 1928. hdl:2027/mdp.39015022221462 . Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  7. "Alphabetical School List Michaelmas 1912". Eton College Chronicle (1413): 223. 12 October 1912. Retrieved 7 February 2024. Wright A. H. N. COLLEGE
  8. "New Boys Michaelmas 1912". Eton College Chronicle (1413): 224. 12 October 1912. Retrieved 7 February 2024. Wright A. H. N.
  9. "Left - Lent Half 1917". Eton College Chronicle (1610): vi. 16 May 1917. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  10. "Aislabie Harcourt Nelson Wright". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  11. Codrington, O. (1908). "Review of Catalogue of Coins in the Indian Museum, Calcutta. Vols. II and III, by H. N. Wright". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland: 1186–1191. doi:10.1017/S0035869X0003817X. JSTOR   25210690.
  12. "Research - Awards". The Numismatic Society of India. Retrieved 8 February 2024.
  13. "The Society's Medal". The Royal Numismatic Society. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  14. Obituary in "Proceedings of the Royal Numismatic Society", The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Royal Numismatic Society Sixth Series, Vol. 1, No. 1/2 (1941), pp. 11-12. https://www.jstor.org/stable/42663326
  15. Website of Numismatic Society of India. https://thenumismatics.org/ - retrieved 6 Feb 2024

Bibliography