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Charles Hose

British colonial administrator, zoologist and ethnologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Hose
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Charles Hose FRGS. FLS (12 October 1863 – 14 November 1929) was a British colonial administrator, zoologist and ethnologist.[1]

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A portrait sketch of Charles Hose.
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Dayak man in gala costume. Photographed by Charles Hose.

Life and career

He was born in Hertfordshire, England, and was educated at Felsted[2] in Essex. Admitted to Clare College, Cambridge in 1882, he almost immediately migrated to Jesus College, and later left Cambridge without taking a degree.[3] He was offered an administrative cadetship in Sarawak by the second Rajah, Sir Charles Brooke, which he took up in 1884. His large collection of ethnographic objects from Borneo was purchased by the British Museum in 1905.[4]

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Animal species named after Hose

Several species named to commemorate his work[5] as zoologist:

Amphibians

Birds

Fish

Mammals

Insects

  • The stick insect: Hermagoras hosei Kirby, 1896 - endemic to Borneo.
  • The cockroach: Dorylaea hosei (Shelford, 1909).
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Places named after Hose

Place

Bibliography

Books authored by Charles Hose include:

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See also

References

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