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See also: European to reach Timbuktu, was See also: born at See also: Edinburgh on the 27th of See also: December 1793
.
He was educated by his See also: father, See also: William
See also: Laing, a private teacher of See also: classics, and at Edinburgh University
.
In 1811 he went to See also: Barbados as clerk to his maternal See also: uncle Colonel (afterwards General) See also: Gabriel See also: Gordon
.
Through General See also: Sir See also: George Beckwith, governor of Barbados, he obtained an ensigncy in the See also: York See also: Light See also: Infantry
.
He was employed in the West Indies, and in 1822 was promoted to a See also: company in the Royal See also: African Corps
.
In that See also: year, while with his regiment at Sierra Leone, he was sent by the governor, Sir See also: Charles MacCarthy, to the
See also: Mandingo country, with the See also: double See also: object of opening up commerce and endeavouring to abolish the slave See also: trade in that region
.
Later in the same year Laing visited Falaba, the capital of the Sulima country, and ascertained the source of the Rokell
.
He endeavoured to reach the source of the See also: Niger, but was stopped by the natives
.
He was, however, enabled to See also: fix it with approximate accuracy
.
He took an active See also: part in the See also: Ashanti War of 1823-24, and was sent home with thedespatches containing the See also: news of the See also: death in See also: action of Sir Charles MacCarthy
.
See also: Henry, 3rd
See also: Earl See also: Bathurst, then secretary for the colonies, instructed Captain Laing to undertake a journey, via See also: Tripoli and Timbuktu, to further elucidate the hydrography of the Niger See also: basin
.
Laing See also: left See also: England in See also: February 1825, and at Tripoli on the 14th of See also: July following he married Emma Warring-ton, daughter of the See also: British See also: consul
.
Two days later, leaving his bride behind, he started toSee also: cross the See also: Sahara, being accompanied by a See also: sheikh who was subsequently accused of planning his See also: murder
.
See also: Ghadames was reached, by an indirect route, in See also: October 1825, and in December Laing was in the See also: Tuat territory, where he was well received by the Tuareg
.
On the loth of See also: January 1826 he left Tuat, and made for Timbuktu across the See also: desert of Tanezroft
.
Letters from him written in May and July following told of sufferings from fever and the plundering of his See also: caravan by Tuareg, Laing being wounded in twenty-four places in the fighting
.
Another letter dated from Timbuktu on the 21st of See also: September announced his arrival in that city on the preceding 18th of See also: August, and the insecurity of his position owing to the hostility of the See also: Fula chieftain See also: Bello, then ruling the city
.
He added that he intended leaving Timbuktu in three days' See also: time
.
No further news was received from the traveller
.
From native information it was ascertained that he left Timbuktu on the See also: day he had planned and was murdered on the See also: night of the 26th of September 1826
.
His papers were never recovered, though it is believed that they were secretly brought to Tripoli in 1828
.
In 1903 the French See also: government placed a tablet bearing the name of the explorer and the date of his visit on the See also: house occupied by him during his See also: thirty-eight days' stay in Timbuktu
.
While in England in 1824 Laing prepared a narrative of his earlier journeys, which was published in 1825 and entitled Travels in the Timannee, Kooranko and Soolima Countries, in Western See also: Africa
.
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