Arthur Upton Fanshawe

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Arthur_Upton_Fanshawe an entity of type: Thing

Sir Arthur Upton Fanshawe, KCIE, CSI, CVO (1848-1931) was a British civil servant in India during the British Raj. He served primarily in the Indian Post Office. Fanshawe was born in Essex on 18 December 1848, the son of Rev. John Faithfull Fanshawe and elder brother of Herbert Charles Fanshawe, and was educated at Repton School. He passed the Civil Service entrance exam in 1869. He took a post with the Bengal Civil Service in 1871, and was appointed to the position of postmaster for Bombay in 1882. After a stint serving in the Finance and Commerce Department, in 1889 he became the Governor of the Indian Post Office, a position he held until 1906. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Arthur Upton Fanshawe
rdf:langString Arthur Upton Fanshawe
rdf:langString Arthur Upton Fanshawe
xsd:date 1848-12-18
xsd:integer 35910894
xsd:integer 1102558751
xsd:date 1848-12-18
rdf:langString Sir Arthur Upton Fanshawe in 1898
xsd:integer 1931
rdf:langString British
rdf:langString Sir Arthur Upton Fanshawe, KCIE, CSI, CVO (1848-1931) was a British civil servant in India during the British Raj. He served primarily in the Indian Post Office. Fanshawe was born in Essex on 18 December 1848, the son of Rev. John Faithfull Fanshawe and elder brother of Herbert Charles Fanshawe, and was educated at Repton School. He passed the Civil Service entrance exam in 1869. He took a post with the Bengal Civil Service in 1871, and was appointed to the position of postmaster for Bombay in 1882. After a stint serving in the Finance and Commerce Department, in 1889 he became the Governor of the Indian Post Office, a position he held until 1906. In 1893, Queen Victoria announced the creation of a Royal Commission on Opium to regulate the British opium trade in the Far East. Fanshawe, a supporter of the opium trade, was nominated to the Commission by the Indian Government. The Commission's report found that opium use in Asia was not a major problem in Asia and its conclusions effectively removed the opium question from the British public agenda for another 15 years.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3465
xsd:gYear 1848
xsd:gYear 1931

data from the linked data cloud