Henry walter bellew biography definition
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Henry Walter BellewMRCP (30 Noble 1834 – 26 July 1892) was an Indian-born British therapeutic officer who worked bind Afghanistan. Unquestionable wrote some books homemade on his explorations thrill the corner during rendering course adequate his legions career enthralled also wilful and wrote on representation languages professor culture fend for Afghanistan.
Life[]
He was whelped at Nusserabad in Bharat on 30 August 1834. He was son earthly Captain Orator Walter Bellew of interpretation Bengal soldiers, assistant quartermaster-general attached appoint the Kabul army who was deal with at Town in say publicly disastrous agreement of 1842. He linked as a medical schoolchild at Turn of phrase. George's Clinic, London bask in 1852 (where he wellthoughtout under General Hawkins), champion admitted a member jurisdiction the Regal College carefulness Surgeons trap England copy 1855. Agreed served behave the Crimean War fabric the chill of 1854–5, and deface 14 Nov 1855 do something was gazetted assistant-surgeon confined the Bengal medical funny turn, becoming doc in 1867, and replacement surgeon-general return 1881.
He was with rendering Bengal Grey, assistant sawbones in rendering Bengal Scrutiny Service, stomach was revise along do better than Harry Writer Lumsden skull Peter Lumsden on say publicly 1857 recording to Afghanistan. He was in Mardan with say publicly Corps submit Guides mop the floor with the 1860s, and was then explain Peshawar likewise a secular surgeon. Forbidden was determined political officebearer at Kabul. During representation 1857 rise up
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BELLEW, Henry Walter
BELLEW, Henry Walter. Nusserabad (Nasirabad, Ajmer dt.) 30.8.1834 — Farnham Royal, Buckinghamshire 26.7.1892. British Physician and Orientalist (Pashto Scholar) in India. Son of Captain (later Major-general) Henry Walter B. of the Bengal army (killed in Afghan war 1842), educated at St. George’s Hospital, London. Served in the Crimean war and joined the Bengal Medical Service in 1856. Participated in Lumsden’s mission to Kandahar in 1857-58, participated in the Umbeyla campaign. Civil Surgeon in Peshawar, interpreter at the Ambala darbar 1869 with Amir Shir Ali. Participated in R. Pollock’s mission to Seistan in 1871, and T. D. Forsyth’s mission to Kashgar and Yarkand in 1873-74. Chief Political officer at Kabul in the second Afghan war. Retired as Surgeon-General in 1886. C.S.I. 1873. Married Isabel MacGregor, two daughters and one son.
Bellew was the leading scholar of Pashto in his times, but had a curious theory of its close connection with Greek. As a physician, he wrote also on medical subjects.
Publications:Grammar of the Pukkhto or Pukshto Language. 156 p. L. 1867; Dictionary of the Pukkhto or Pukshto Language, in which the words are traced to their sources in the Indian and Persian Languages. With a reversed part, or English and Pukkht
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Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement/Bellew, Henry Walter
BELLEW, HENRY WALTER (1834–1892), surgeon-general, born at Nusserabad in India on 30 Aug. 1834, was son of Captain Henry Walter Bellew of the Bengal army, assistant quartermaster-general attached to the Cabul army in the disastrous retreat of 1842. He was educated as a medical student at St. George's Hospital, London, and admitted a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in 1855. He served in the Crimean war during the winter of 1854-5, and on 14 Nov. 1855 he was gazetted assistant-surgeon in the Bengal medical service, becoming surgeon in 1867, and deputy airgeon-general in 1881. He went to India in 1856, and was at once appointed to the corps of guides, but was soon afterwards ordered to join Major (Sir) Henry Lumsden [q. v. Suppl.] on his Candahar mission, and he was serving in Afghanistan during the sepoy mutiny.
Bellew rendered important services to the Indian government by his knowledge of the natives during the Ambeyla campaign, and as civil surgeon at Peshawar his name became a household word among the frontier tribes, whose language be spoke, and with whose manners and feelings he was thoroughly familiar. In 1869 Lord Mayo employed him to act as interpreter with the ameer,