John Bowring

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Sir John Bowring
John Bowring

John Bowring in 1826


In office
13 April 1854 – 9 September 1859
Preceded by Sir John Francis Davis
Succeeded by Hercules Robinson, 1st Baron Rosmead

Born October 17, 1792(1792-10-17)
Flag of the United Kingdom Exeter, England, Great Britain
Died November 23, 1872 (aged 80)
Flag of the United Kingdom Claremont, England, UK
Political party Radical
Spouse Maria Lewin (m. 1816 - d. 1858)
Deborah Castle (m. 1860, survived)
Children John Charles Bowring,
Lewin Bentham Bowring,
Edgar Alfred Bowring
Profession Member of Parliament (UK)
Religion Unitarian

Sir John Bowring, KCB (Chinese translated name: 寶寧 or 包令) (17 October 179223 November 1872) was an English political economist, traveller, miscellaneous writer and polyglot, and the 4th Governor of Hong Kong.

Contents

Bowring was born in Exeter of an old Puritan family. In early life he came under the influence of Jeremy Bentham, and later became his friend. He did not, however, share Bentham's contempt for belles lettres. He was a diligent student of literature and foreign languages, especially those of Eastern Europe.

Bowring ranked with Giuseppe Caspar Mezzofanti and Hans Conon von der Gabelentz among the world's greatest hyperpolyglots — his talent enabling him at last to say that he knew 200 languages, and could speak 100. The first fruits of his study of foreign literature appeared in Specimens of the Russian Poets (1821–1823). These were followed by Batavian Anthology (1824), Ancient Poetry and Romances of Spain (1824), Specimens of the Polish Poets, and Serbian Popular Poetry, both in 1827.

During this period he began to contribute to the newly founded Westminster Review, of which he was appointed editor in 1825. By his contributions to the Review he obtained considerable reputation as political economist and parliamentary reformer. He advocated in its pages the cause of free trade long before it was popularized by Richard Cobden and John Bright.

He pleaded earnestly on behalf of parliamentary reform, Catholic emancipation, and popular education. In 1828 he visited the Netherlands, and in February 1829 the University of Groningen conferred on him the degree of doctor of laws. In the following year he was in Denmark, preparing for the publication of a collection of Scandinavian poetry.

Bowring was appointed Jeremy Bentham's literary executor, and was charged with the task of preparing a collected edition of his works. This appeared in eleven volumes in 1843.

In 1835, Bowring entered parliament as member for Kilmarnock Burghs; and in the following year he was appointed head of a government commission to be sent to France to inquire into the actual state of commerce between the two countries. He was engaged in similar investigations in Switzerland, Italy, Syria and some of the German states.

The results of these missions appeared in a series of reports laid before the House of Commons. After a retirement of four years he sat in parliament from 1841 until 1849 as member for Bolton. During this busy period he found leisure for literature, and published in 1843 a translation of the Manuscript of the Queen's Court, a collection of old Czech lyrics. In 1846 he became President of the Mazzinian People's International League.

In 1849, Bowring was appointed British consul at Canton (today's Guangzhou), and superintendent of trade in China, a post which he held for four years.

After his return, Bowring distinguished himself as an advocate of decimal currency, and published a work entitled The Decimal System in Numbers, Coins and Accounts (1854). The introduction of the florin as a preparatory step was chiefly due to his efforts.

On 13 April 1854, Bowring was sent to Hong Kong as governor.

During his governorship, a dispute broke out with the Chinese and the irritation caused by his spirited or high-handed policy led to the Second Opium War (1856–1860). At the same time, he allowed the Chinese citizens in Hong Kong to serve as jurors in trials and become lawyers. Finally, Bowring is credited with establishing Hong Kong's first commercial public water supply system and establishing the Hong Kong buildings ordinance, ensuring the safer design of all future construction projects in the territory.

He had developed the eastern Wan Chai at a river mouth near Happy Valley and Victoria Harbour. He elongated the river as canal and the area was named Bowring City (Bowrington).

In 1855 he visited Siam, and negotiated with King Mongkut a treaty of commerce, now commonly referred as the Bowring Treaty. Bowring retired in March 1859 and received a pension for his duties.

Bowrington Canal in 1920
Bowrington Canal in 1920

As the 4th Governor, several places in Hong Kong came to be named after him. Bowring Praya West and Bowring Praya Central were two roads built on reclaimed land during his tenure, but were respectively renamed Des Voeux Road West and Des Voeux Road Central in 1890 after the Praya Reclamation Scheme. The road has since been merged into Des Voeux Road.

Bowrington, or Bowring City, was an area Bowring had built around the estuary of the Wong Nai Chung river, and is the site of the Bowrington Market. He built an extension named the Bowrington Canal, over which the Bowrington Road (now called Canal Road) and the Bowrington Bridge passed.

His last employment by the British government was as a commissioner to Italy in 1861, to report on British commercial relations with the new kingdom. Bowring subsequently accepted the appointment of minister plenipotentiary and envoy extraordinary from the Hawaiian government to the courts of Europe, and in this capacity negotiated treaties with Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Switzerland.

Bowring had three sons. His eldest son, J.C. Bowring, presented Bowring's collection of coleoptera to the British Museum after Bowring's death. His third son, Edgar Alfred Bowring, was a Member of Parliament for Exeter from 1868 to 1874. E. A. Bowring is also known as an able translator in the literary circles of the time.

Bowring died at Claremont, near Exeter, on 23 November 1872, aged 80.

  • Specimens of the Russian Poets (1821–1823)
  • Peter Schlemihl, a German Story (Translation, 1824)
  • Batavian Anthology (1824)
  • Ancient Poetry and Romances of Spain (1824)
  • Hymns (Privately published, 1825) This includes the hymn, In the cross of Christ I glory, still used in many churches.
  • Specimens of the Polish Poets (1827)
  • Serbian Popular Poetry (1827)
  • Poetry of the Magyars (1830)
  • Cheskian Anthology (1832)
  • Bentham's Deontology (Editor, 1834). Volume I, Volume II
  • Minor Morals (1834)
  • Manuscript of the Queen's Court (1843)
  • The Decimal System in Numbers, Coins and Accounts (1854)
  • The Kingdom and People of Siam (1857)
  • Translations from Hungarian poet Alexander Petofi (1866)
  • Various other pamphlets


Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
John Dunlop
Member of Parliament for Kilmarnock Burghs
18351837
Succeeded by
John Campbell Colquhoun
Preceded by
Peter Ainsworth and
William Bolling
Member of Parliament for Bolton
with Peter Ainsworth, to 1847;
William Bolling, 1857–1848;
Stephen Blair, from 1848

18411849
Succeeded by
Stephen Blair and
Sir Joshua Walmsley
Government offices
Preceded by
Sir George Bonham
Governor of Hong Kong
1854–1859
Succeeded by
William Caine (Administrator)
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