John Harington Gubbins

British linguist and diplomat
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish linguist and diplomat
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasDiplomat
Work fieldPolitics
Gender
Male
Birth24 January 1852, India
Death23 February 1929Edinburgh (aged 77 years)
The details

Biography

John Harington Gubbins (1852-1929) was a British linguist, consular official and diplomat.

Education

Gubbins attended Harrow School and would have gone on to Cambridge University, had family finances allowed.

Career

Gubbins was appointed a student interpreter in the British Japan Consular Service in 1871; English Secretary to the Conference at Tokyo for the Revision of the Treaties, after Ernest Satow left Japan in 1883, and on 1 June 1889 became Japanese Secretary at Tokyo.

He was employed in London at the Foreign Office from February to July 1894 in the Aoki-Kimberley negotiations which resulted in the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Commerce and Navigation (16 July 1894). He was, especially in retirement, a close friend of Satow's. He was elected the first President of the newly founded Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch in 1900.

Despite having no university degree, Gubbins was awarded an honorary master's degree from Balliol College and was made Lecturer in Japanese language at Oxford University (1909–12). Lack of pupils led to his position being terminated.

Family

He was the father of Colin Gubbins.

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