Charles Hose

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A portrait sketch of Charles Hose.
Dayak man in gala costume. Photographed by Charles Hose.

Charles Hose FRGS. FLS (12 October 1863 – 14 November 1929) was a British colonial administrator, zoologist and ethnologist.[1]

Life and career[]

He was born in Hertfordshire, England, and was educated at Felsted[2] in Essex. Admitted to Clare College, Cambridge in 1882, he almost immediately migrated to Jesus College, and later left Cambridge without taking a degree.[3] He was offered an administrative cadetship in Sarawak by the second Rajah, Sir Charles Brooke, which he took up in 1884. His large collection of ethnographic objects from Borneo was purchased by the British Museum in 1905.[4]

Animal species named after Hose[]

Several species named to commemorate his work[5] as zoologist:

Amphibians

Birds

  • Hose's broadbill, Calyptomena hosii endemic to Borneo.
  • Black oriole, Oriolus hosii endemic to Borneo.

Fish

Mammals

  • Hose's shrew or Bornean pygmy shrew, Suncus hosei endemic to Malaysia.
  • Hose's pygmy flying squirrel, Petaurillus hosei endemic to Malaysia.
  • Four-striped ground squirrel, Lariscus hosei endemic to Borneo.
  • Hose's palm civet, Diplogale hosei endemic to Borneo: East Malaysia and Brunei.
  • Fraser's dolphin, Lagenodelphis hosei
  • Hose's leaf monkey, Presbytis hosei endemic to Borneo.

Places named after Hose[]

Place

Bibliography[]

Books authored by Charles Hose include:

See also[]

  • Category:Taxa named by Charles Hose

References[]

  1. ^ Haddon, A. C. (20 November 1929). "Obituary: Dr. Charles Hose". Nature. 124 (3135): 845. doi:10.1038/124845a0.
  2. ^ "Hose, Charles". Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. pp. 877–878.
  3. ^ "Hose, Charles (HS882C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ British Museum Collection
  5. ^ http://zoohistory.co.uk/html/modules/Downloads/files/whowaswho.pdf[permanent dead link] A Zoological 'Who was Who' by Mike Grayson
  6. ^ Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara (22 September 2018). "Order CYPRINIFORMES: Families LEPTOBARBIDAE, XENOCYPRIDIDAE and TINCIDAE". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 8 March 2021.

External links[]

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