Thomas Stamford Raffles was born
at sea on board a ship Ann on the 6th of July, 1781 off the coast of Jamaica.
In 1795, the young man accepted his first job in the East India Company as a
clerk. But he studied hard in his spare time and in 1804, was posted to
Penang (then Prince of Wales Island) and promoted to Assistant Secretary to
the Presidency of that Malaysian island. His mastery over the Malay language
made him indispensable to the British Government, and he was later appointed
Malay translator to the Government of India. In 1811, he returned as the
Lieutenant Governor of Java, and was soon promoted to Governor of Bencoolen
(now Sumatra). On 19th January, 1819, Raffles founded modern Singapore and
first mooted the idea which led to the establishment of the Raffles Museum on
the island.
Stamford Raffles was deeply
fascinated by the immense diversity of strange animals and plants of the East
Indies during his tenure there. He soon employed zoologists and botanists to
discover all they can about the animals and plants of the region and would
pay his assistants out of his own pockets to collect specimens. He also
revived and became the president of the Batavian Society which was actively
engaged in the study of natural history of Java and adjacent areas.
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In her memoirs of him, his wife Lady Sophia Raffles, also mentions his
zoological collection, among which were beautiful specimens of tapirs,
rhinoceros and barking deer. She mentions that these were sent to England.
Raffles also kept some animals as pets. A Sun Bear cub he reared with his
children reportedly often joined him for dinner, eating mangoes and drinking
champagne.
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Raffles' principal assistant Abdullah, also his Malay tutor, was engaged in packing all the stuffed skins and skeletons which numbered some one-thousand specimens. Earlier, throughout his time in Java and Sumatra, Raffles had sent home many consignments of creatures preserved in spirit. Lady Raffles recalls that Raffles' interest in biology was great as evidenced by references to plants and animals in most of his letters. He had compiled a long list of animals of which, he believed nothing is yet known beyond the name and native descriptions.
On his return journey to England
in 1824 on the ship Fame, he lost a huge consignment of plant and animal
specimens, notes, papers and even certain drawings to a fire aboard. Upon his
return, he founded the now world famous Zoological Society of London of which
he was its first president, and the London Zoo.
Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles passed
away a day before his 45th birthday in 1826. A few years earlier, in 1821 and
1822, he contributed two papers in the Transactions of the Zoological
Society, London, with descriptions of some 34 species of birds and 13 species
of mammals, chiefly from Sumatra. Most of the new species he named are valid
today, and these animals will continue to remind us of the contributions he
has made. Animals named by Raffles himself include:
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BIRDS
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Ardea
sumatrana Great-billed Heron
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Gorsachius
melanolophus Malayan Night Heron
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Mycteria
cinerea Milky Stork
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Lophura
erythrophthalma Crestless Fireback Pheasant
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Rallina
fasciata Red-legged Crake
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Sterna
sumatrana Black-naped Tern
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Ducula
badia Mountain Imperial Pigeon
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Phaenicophaeus
sumatranus Chestnut-bellied Malkoha
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Phaenicophaeus
chlorophaeus Raffles' Malkoha
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Bubo
sumatranus Barred Eagle Owl
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Ninox
scutulata Brown Hawk Owl
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Harpactes
kasumba Red-naped Trogon
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Berenicornis
comatus White-crowned Hornbill
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Anthracoceros
malayanus Black Hornbill
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Corydon
sumatranus Dusky Broadbill
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Eurylaimus
ochromalus Black-&-Yellow Broadbill
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Calyptomena
viridis Green Broadbill
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Pitta
caerulea Giant Pitta
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Tephrodornis
gularis Large Wood Shrike
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Pericrocotus
divaricatus Ashy Minivet
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Muscicapa
latirostris Brown Flycatcher
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Cyornis
rufigastra Mangrove Blue Flycatcher
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Aethopyga
siparaja Crimson Sunbird
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As Stamford Raffles was well-known in natural history circles, a number of animals and plants have been named in his honour. They include Megalaima rafflesi (Red-crowned Barbet), Dinopium rafflesii (Olive-backed Woodpecker) and Chaetodon rafflesi (Latticed Butterflyfish). Perhaps the most distinctive organism named after him would be Rafflesia, a genus of plants parasitic on palm trees which he discovered on an expedition to a jungle in Sumatra. These are endemic to Southeast Asia and produce the world's largest and possibly the most spectacular (abeit evil-smelling) flowers. |
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