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David George Hogarth

David George Hogarth CMG FRGS FBA (23 May 1862 – 6 November 1927), also known as D. G. Hogarth, was a British archaeologist and scholar associated with T. E. Lawrence and Arthur Evans. He was Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford from 1909 to 1927.

David George Hogarth
Commander Hogarth in 1918
Born23 May 1862
Died6 November 1927 (aged 65)
NationalityBritish
Alma materOxford University
SpouseLaura Violet (Hogarth) Uppleby
Scientific career
FieldsArchaeology, classics, education, journalism, fund directorship, museum curatorship, intelligence operations and directorship, diplomacy
Institutions

Hogarth was commissioned into the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during the First World War, and served with the Naval Intelligence Division. During 1916, he was the acting director of the Arab Bureau, and was later responsible for delivering the Hogarth message.

Early life and education edit

D. G. Hogarth was the son of Reverend George Hogarth, Vicar of Barton-upon-Humber, and Jane Elizabeth (Uppleby) Hogarth. He had a sister three years younger, Janet E. Courtney, an author and feminist. In one of his autobiographical works, Hogarth claimed to be an antiquary who was made so, rather than born to it. He said, "nothing disposed me to my trade in early years." Those years included a secondary education, 1876–1880, at Winchester College, which claims to be, and was labelled by Hogarth as, "our oldest Public School."[1]

In October 1881, Hogarth matriculated into Magdalen College, Oxford to study Literae Humaniores.[2] He achieved first class honours in both Mods (1882) and Greats (1885).[2] He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 1885:[2] as per tradition, his BA was promoted to a Master of Arts (MA Oxon) degree.[3]

Career edit

In 1886, Hogarth was elected a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford.[2][3] Between 1887 and 1907, he travelled to excavations in Cyprus, Crete, Egypt, Syria, Melos, and Ephesus (the Temple of Artemis).[4] On the island of Crete, he excavated Zakros and Psychro Cave. Hogarth was named director of the British School at Athens in 1897 and occupied the position until 1900.[5] He was the keeper of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford from 1909[6] until his death in 1927.[7][8]

 
Hogarth (centre), with T. E. Lawrence (left) and Lt Col. Dawnay at the Arab Bureau, Cairo, May 1918

In 1915, during the First World War, Hogarth was commissioned with the temporary rank of lieutenant commander in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve[9] and joined the Geographical Section of the Naval Intelligence Division. Professor Hogarth was appointed the acting director of the Arab Bureau, for a time during 1916 when Sir Mark Sykes went back to London. Kinahan Cornwallis was his deputy.[citation needed] Hogarth was close with T. E. Lawrence and worked with Lawrence to plan the Arab Revolt.[10]

Sykes befriended Hogarth, who had described India Government as believing they had a moral imperative to the British Raj as the best form of government and could not fail in their duty to impose it on a Province of Mesopotamia. The Arabists rejected this proposal vehemently; Sykes taking Hogarth's research as evidence of the uniquely different situation in the protectorate. The archaeologists knew it was clear that the Raj had no understanding of the different conditions, that there needed to be a specific "Arab Policy" for what had become a frontier of empire.[11]

Hogarth returned to Oxford and the Ashmolean Museum in June 1919.[2] From 1925 to 1927 he was President of the Royal Geographical Society.[12]

Personal life edit

 
D. G. Hogarth M.A. by Augustus John

On 7 November 1894, Hogarth married Laura Violet Uppleby, daughter of George Charles Uppleby.[13] His wife and mother shared a common great-great-grandfather, one John Uppleby of Wootton, Lincolnshire.[14] Laura Violet was 26 at the time; David George, 32. They had one son, William David Hogarth (1901–1965).[15] A granddaughter, Caroline Barron, is a historian of later medieval England.[16]

In 1926, Hogarth's health began rapidly deteriorating due to a heart condition, and he was granted leave from Oxford in October 1927. He died on 6 November 1927 at his home in Oxford (20 St Giles' Street). He was aged 65.[2][17]

Honours edit

 
Handwriting (1906)

In 1896, Hogarth was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (FRGS).[2] In 1905, he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA), the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and social sciences.[3] In 1917, he was made a Commander of the Order of the Nile by the Sultan of Egypt,[3] and awarded the Founder's Medal of the Royal Geographical Society.[2] In the 1918 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) for his efforts during the First World War.[18] In 1919, he was awarded the Order of Nahda (Hejaz) 2nd class by Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca.[3]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

By Hogarth edit

  • Hogarth, D. G.; James, M. R.; Smith, R. Elsey; Gardner, E. A. (1888). 'Excavations in Cyprus, 1887-88. Paphos, Leontari, Amargetti'. The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 9: 147–271. doi:10.2307/623675. ISSN 0075-4269.
  • Hogarth, David George (1889). Devia Cypria: notes of an archaeological journey in Cyprus in 1888. London: H. Frowde.[19]
  • —— (1896). A wandering scholar in the Levant. London: J. Murray.
  • —— (1897). Philip and Alexander of Macedon: two essays in biography. New York: C. Scribner's Sons.
  • Grenfell, Bernard Pyne, Hunt, Arthur Surridge, and Hogarth, David George (1900). Fayûm Towns and Their Papyri, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner/Quaritch/Frowde.
  • —— (1902). The Nearer East. London: W. Heinemann.
  • —— (1904). The penetration of Arabia : a record of the development of Western knowledge concerning the Arabian peninsula. London: Lawrence and Bullen.
  • The Archaic Artemisia of Ephesus (1908)
  • —— (1909). Ionia and the East; six lectures delivered before the University of London. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • —— (1910). Accidents of an antiquary's life. London: MacMillan and Co., Limited.[20]
  • The Ancient East (1914)
  • Hogarth, D. G. and Benson, E. F. (n.d.) Report on prospects of Research in Alexandria. London: Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies,
  • Forbes, Nevill; Toynbee, Arnold J.; Mitrany, D.; Hogarth, D. G. (1915). "Turkey". The Balkans: A History of Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece, Rumania, Turkey. Oxford: At the Clarendon Press. Retrieved 21 September 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  • —— (1920). Hittite seals, with particular reference to the Ashmolean collection. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Arabia (1922) (also as A History of Arabia)
  • Kings of the Hittites (1926) (Schweich Lectures for 1924)
  • The Life of Charles M. Doughty (1928)

With Hogarth as editor edit

  • Authority and Archaeology – Sacred and Profane – Essays on the relation of monuments to Biblical and Classical Literature (1899 2nd Edition)

References edit

  1. ^ Hogarth 1910, pp. 1–2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Gill, David (7 January 2010). "Hogarth, David George". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/33924. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ a b c d e "Hogarth, David George, (23 May 1862–6 Nov. 1927), Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum since 1909; President of the Royal Geographical Society since 1925". Who Was Who. Oxford University Press. 1 December 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U197973.
  4. ^ "HOGARTH, David George". Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. p. 855.
  5. ^ "BSA Managing Committee (1886-1918)". History of the British School at Athens. 7 February 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  6. ^ It was at the Ashmolean in early 1909 that Hogarth first met T. E. Lawrence – Wilson, Jeremy (1989) Lawrence of Arabia p.53 – ( see also long footnote on p.987-988 where Robert Graves in his 1927 work Lawrence and the Arabs had an account of the meeting as January 1909 )
  7. ^ M, J. L. (1927) Dr. D. G. Hogarth, C.M.G M, J. L Nature Vol: 120 Issue: 3029 ISSN 0028-0836 Date: 1927 Pages: 735 – 737, "...By the unexpected death of Dr. David George Hogarth (6 Nov.), geography and archaeology lost briefly their most distinguished representatives in Great Britain ..."
  8. ^ "DEATH OF ARCHAEOLOGIST". The Brisbane Courier. Qld.: National Library of Australia. 8 November 1927. p. 15. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  9. ^ "No. 29348". The London Gazette. 2 November 1915. p. 10763.
  10. ^ "The Penetration of Arabia: A Record of the Development of Western Knowledge Concerning the Arabian Peninsula". World Digital Library. 1904. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  11. ^ James Onley, The Arabian Frontier of the British Raj (1921)
  12. ^ Fletcher, C. R. L. (1928). "David George Hogarth". The Geographical Journal. JSTOR. 71 (4): 321–344. JSTOR 1782410.
  13. ^ Foster, J (1871). The pedigree of Wilson of High Wray & Kendal, and the families connected with them. Google Books.Google Books
  14. ^ Ball, H.W. (1856). The social history and antiquities of Barton-upon-Humber. Google Books [1]
  15. ^ A summary of the family connections of Hogarth and his wife is to be found, with sources, at "David George Hogarth". ancestry.com. 2011.
  16. ^ Griffin, Jasper (18 September 2008). "Obituary: John Barron". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  17. ^ Several contemporaneous newspaper articles from 1927 reported his death as being on Saturday, November 5, 1927.
    • "Hogarth, Geographer and Explorer, Dead". The Indianapolis Star. Oxford, England, Nov. 6. Associated Press. 7 November 1927. p. 19.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
    • "Explorer & Scholar". Western Morning News. Plymouth, Devon, England. 7 November 1927. p. 8.
    • "David G. Hogarth Died in England". Times Colonist. Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. 7 November 1927. p. 3.
    • "Dr. D.G. Hogarth". The Guardian. London, Greater London, England. 7 November 1927. p. 4.
    • "Dr. Hogarth, Ashmolean Museum". Obituary. The Daily Telegraph. London, Greater London, England. 7 November 1927. p. 10.
  18. ^ "No. 30451". The London Gazette (Supplement). 28 December 1917. p. 82.
  19. ^ "Review of Devia Cypria by D. G. Hogarth". The Athenæum (3246): 53–54. 11 January 1890.
  20. ^ Hall, H. R. (1910). "Review of Accidents of an Antiquary's Life by D. G. Hogarth". The Classical Review. 24 (6): 192–193. doi:10.1017/s0009840x00045364. S2CID 163816976.

Bibliography edit

  • Graves, Robert (1927). Lawrence and the Arabs. London: Jonathan Cape.
  • M. J. L. (1927). "Dr. D. G. Hogarth, C.M.G". Nature. 120 (3029): 735–737. Bibcode:1927Natur.120..735J. doi:10.1038/120735a0.
  • Onley, James (2007). The Arabian Frontier of the British Raj. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Townshend, Charles (2010). When God Made Hell: The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq 1914-1921. Faber and Faber.
  • Wilson, Jeremy (1989). Lawrence of Arabia. Atheneum. ISBN 9780689119347.

External links edit

Academic offices
Preceded by Director of the British School at Athens
1897 to 1900
Succeeded by
Preceded by Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum
1909 to 1927
Succeeded by

david, george, hogarth, frgs, 1862, november, 1927, also, known, hogarth, british, archaeologist, scholar, associated, with, lawrence, arthur, evans, keeper, ashmolean, museum, oxford, from, 1909, 1927, commander, hogarth, 1918born23, 1862barton, upon, humber,. David George Hogarth CMG FRGS FBA 23 May 1862 6 November 1927 also known as D G Hogarth was a British archaeologist and scholar associated with T E Lawrence and Arthur Evans He was Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum Oxford from 1909 to 1927 David George HogarthCommander Hogarth in 1918Born23 May 1862Barton upon Humber Lincolnshire EnglandDied6 November 1927 aged 65 Oxford Oxfordshire EnglandNationalityBritishAlma materOxford UniversitySpouseLaura Violet Hogarth UpplebyScientific careerFieldsArchaeology classics education journalism fund directorship museum curatorship intelligence operations and directorship diplomacyInstitutionsMagdalen College Oxford British School at Athens Ashmolean MuseumHogarth was commissioned into the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during the First World War and served with the Naval Intelligence Division During 1916 he was the acting director of the Arab Bureau and was later responsible for delivering the Hogarth message Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Honours 5 See also 6 Bibliography 6 1 By Hogarth 6 2 With Hogarth as editor 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life and education editD G Hogarth was the son of Reverend George Hogarth Vicar of Barton upon Humber and Jane Elizabeth Uppleby Hogarth He had a sister three years younger Janet E Courtney an author and feminist In one of his autobiographical works Hogarth claimed to be an antiquary who was made so rather than born to it He said nothing disposed me to my trade in early years Those years included a secondary education 1876 1880 at Winchester College which claims to be and was labelled by Hogarth as our oldest Public School 1 In October 1881 Hogarth matriculated into Magdalen College Oxford to study Literae Humaniores 2 He achieved first class honours in both Mods 1882 and Greats 1885 2 He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts BA degree in 1885 2 as per tradition his BA was promoted to a Master of Arts MA Oxon degree 3 Career editIn 1886 Hogarth was elected a Fellow of Magdalen College Oxford 2 3 Between 1887 and 1907 he travelled to excavations in Cyprus Crete Egypt Syria Melos and Ephesus the Temple of Artemis 4 On the island of Crete he excavated Zakros and Psychro Cave Hogarth was named director of the British School at Athens in 1897 and occupied the position until 1900 5 He was the keeper of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford from 1909 6 until his death in 1927 7 8 nbsp Hogarth centre with T E Lawrence left and Lt Col Dawnay at the Arab Bureau Cairo May 1918In 1915 during the First World War Hogarth was commissioned with the temporary rank of lieutenant commander in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve 9 and joined the Geographical Section of the Naval Intelligence Division Professor Hogarth was appointed the acting director of the Arab Bureau for a time during 1916 when Sir Mark Sykes went back to London Kinahan Cornwallis was his deputy citation needed Hogarth was close with T E Lawrence and worked with Lawrence to plan the Arab Revolt 10 Sykes befriended Hogarth who had described India Government as believing they had a moral imperative to the British Raj as the best form of government and could not fail in their duty to impose it on a Province of Mesopotamia The Arabists rejected this proposal vehemently Sykes taking Hogarth s research as evidence of the uniquely different situation in the protectorate The archaeologists knew it was clear that the Raj had no understanding of the different conditions that there needed to be a specific Arab Policy for what had become a frontier of empire 11 Hogarth returned to Oxford and the Ashmolean Museum in June 1919 2 From 1925 to 1927 he was President of the Royal Geographical Society 12 Personal life edit nbsp D G Hogarth M A by Augustus JohnOn 7 November 1894 Hogarth married Laura Violet Uppleby daughter of George Charles Uppleby 13 His wife and mother shared a common great great grandfather one John Uppleby of Wootton Lincolnshire 14 Laura Violet was 26 at the time David George 32 They had one son William David Hogarth 1901 1965 15 A granddaughter Caroline Barron is a historian of later medieval England 16 In 1926 Hogarth s health began rapidly deteriorating due to a heart condition and he was granted leave from Oxford in October 1927 He died on 6 November 1927 at his home in Oxford 20 St Giles Street He was aged 65 2 17 Honours edit nbsp Handwriting 1906 In 1896 Hogarth was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society FRGS 2 In 1905 he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy FBA the United Kingdom s national academy for the humanities and social sciences 3 In 1917 he was made a Commander of the Order of the Nile by the Sultan of Egypt 3 and awarded the Founder s Medal of the Royal Geographical Society 2 In the 1918 New Year Honours he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George CMG for his efforts during the First World War 18 In 1919 he was awarded the Order of Nahda Hejaz 2nd class by Hussein bin Ali Sharif of Mecca 3 See also editGertrude Bell Mr DrydenBibliography editBy Hogarth edit Hogarth D G James M R Smith R Elsey Gardner E A 1888 Excavations in Cyprus 1887 88 Paphos Leontari Amargetti The Journal of Hellenic Studies 9 147 271 doi 10 2307 623675 ISSN 0075 4269 Hogarth David George 1889 Devia Cypria notes of an archaeological journey in Cyprus in 1888 London H Frowde 19 1896 A wandering scholar in the Levant London J Murray 1897 Philip and Alexander of Macedon two essays in biography New York C Scribner s Sons Grenfell Bernard Pyne Hunt Arthur Surridge and Hogarth David George 1900 Fayum Towns and Their Papyri London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner Quaritch Frowde 1902 The Nearer East London W Heinemann 1904 The penetration of Arabia a record of the development of Western knowledge concerning the Arabian peninsula London Lawrence and Bullen The Archaic Artemisia of Ephesus 1908 1909 Ionia and the East six lectures delivered before the University of London Oxford Clarendon Press 1910 Accidents of an antiquary s life London MacMillan and Co Limited 20 The Ancient East 1914 Hogarth D G and Benson E F n d Report on prospects of Research in Alexandria London Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies Forbes Nevill Toynbee Arnold J Mitrany D Hogarth D G 1915 Turkey The Balkans A History of Bulgaria Serbia Greece Rumania Turkey Oxford At the Clarendon Press Retrieved 21 September 2018 via Internet Archive 1920 Hittite seals with particular reference to the Ashmolean collection Oxford Clarendon Press Arabia 1922 also as A History of Arabia Kings of the Hittites 1926 Schweich Lectures for 1924 The Life of Charles M Doughty 1928 With Hogarth as editor edit Authority and Archaeology Sacred and Profane Essays on the relation of monuments to Biblical and Classical Literature 1899 2nd Edition References edit Hogarth 1910 pp 1 2 a b c d e f g h Gill David 7 January 2010 Hogarth David George Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 33924 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e Hogarth David George 23 May 1862 6 Nov 1927 Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum since 1909 President of the Royal Geographical Society since 1925 Who Was Who Oxford University Press 1 December 2007 doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 U197973 HOGARTH David George Who s Who Vol 59 1907 p 855 BSA Managing Committee 1886 1918 History of the British School at Athens 7 February 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2016 It was at the Ashmolean in early 1909 that Hogarth first met T E Lawrence Wilson Jeremy 1989 Lawrence of Arabia p 53 see also long footnote on p 987 988 where Robert Graves in his 1927 work Lawrence and the Arabs had an account of the meeting as January 1909 M J L 1927 Dr D G Hogarth C M G M J L Nature Vol 120 Issue 3029 ISSN 0028 0836 Date 1927 Pages 735 737 By the unexpected death of Dr David George Hogarth 6 Nov geography and archaeology lost briefly their most distinguished representatives in Great Britain DEATH OF ARCHAEOLOGIST The Brisbane Courier Qld National Library of Australia 8 November 1927 p 15 Retrieved 2 May 2012 No 29348 The London Gazette 2 November 1915 p 10763 The Penetration of Arabia A Record of the Development of Western Knowledge Concerning the Arabian Peninsula World Digital Library 1904 Retrieved 24 September 2013 James Onley The Arabian Frontier of the British Raj 1921 Fletcher C R L 1928 David George Hogarth The Geographical Journal JSTOR 71 4 321 344 JSTOR 1782410 Foster J 1871 The pedigree of Wilson of High Wray amp Kendal and the families connected with them Google Books Google Books Ball H W 1856 The social history and antiquities of Barton upon Humber Google Books 1 A summary of the family connections of Hogarth and his wife is to be found with sources at David George Hogarth ancestry com 2011 Griffin Jasper 18 September 2008 Obituary John Barron The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2019 Several contemporaneous newspaper articles from 1927 reported his death as being on Saturday November 5 1927 Hogarth Geographer and Explorer Dead The Indianapolis Star Oxford England Nov 6 Associated Press 7 November 1927 p 19 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint location link Explorer amp Scholar Western Morning News Plymouth Devon England 7 November 1927 p 8 David G Hogarth Died in England Times Colonist Victoria British Columbia Canada 7 November 1927 p 3 Dr D G Hogarth The Guardian London Greater London England 7 November 1927 p 4 Dr Hogarth Ashmolean Museum Obituary The Daily Telegraph London Greater London England 7 November 1927 p 10 No 30451 The London Gazette Supplement 28 December 1917 p 82 Review of Devia Cypria by D G Hogarth The Athenaeum 3246 53 54 11 January 1890 Hall H R 1910 Review of Accidents of an Antiquary s Life by D G Hogarth The Classical Review 24 6 192 193 doi 10 1017 s0009840x00045364 S2CID 163816976 Bibliography edit Graves Robert 1927 Lawrence and the Arabs London Jonathan Cape M J L 1927 Dr D G Hogarth C M G Nature 120 3029 735 737 Bibcode 1927Natur 120 735J doi 10 1038 120735a0 Onley James 2007 The Arabian Frontier of the British Raj New York Oxford University Press Townshend Charles 2010 When God Made Hell The British Invasion of Mesopotamia and the Creation of Iraq 1914 1921 Faber and Faber Wilson Jeremy 1989 Lawrence of Arabia Atheneum ISBN 9780689119347 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to David George Hogarth nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about David George Hogarth Works by David George Hogarth at Project Gutenberg Works by or about David George Hogarth at Internet Archive Commemorative tablet of Hogarth set in the wall of St Peter s Church Barton at Grimsby Evening TelegraphAcademic officesPreceded byCecil Harcourt Smith Director of the British School at Athens1897 to 1900 Succeeded byR C BosanquetPreceded bySir Arthur Evans Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum1909 to 1927 Succeeded byEdward Thurlow Leeds Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David George Hogarth amp oldid 1201244104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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