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FREDERICK COURTNEY SELOUS (1851- )

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 614 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FREDERICK COURTNEY SELOUS (1851- )  ,
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British explorer and hunter, was born in
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London on the 31st of December 1851, and was educated at
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Rugby and in Germany . His love for natural
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history led to the resolve to study the ways of wild animals in their native haunts . Going to South Africa when he was nineteen he travelled from the Cape to Matabeleland, reached early in 1872, and was granted permission by Lobengula to shoot
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game anywhere in his dominions . From that date until 189o, with a few brief intervals spent in England, Selous hunted and explored over the then little-known regions north of the
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Transvaal and south of the
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Congo basin,
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shooting elephants, and
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collecting specimens of all kinds for museums and private collections . His travels added largely to the knowledge of the country now known as Rhodesia . He made valuable ethnological investigations, and throughout his wanderings—often among
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people who had never previously seen a white man—he maintained cordial relations with the Kaffir chiefs and tribes, winning their confidence and esteem, notably so in the case of Lobengula . In 1890 Selous entered the service of the British South Africa
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Company, acting as guide to the
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pioneer expedition to Mashonaland . Over 400 M. of road were constructed through a country of
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forest, mountain and swamp, and in two and a
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half months Selous took the column safely to its destination . He then went east to Manica, concluding arrangements there which brought the country under British control . Coming to England in December 1892 he was awarded the Founder's medal of the Royal
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Geographical Society "in recognition of his extensive explorations and surveys," of which he gave a
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summary in " Twenty Years in Zambesia" (Geo . Journ. vol. i., 1893) . He returned to Africa to take
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part in the first Matabele War (1893), being wounded during the advance on
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Bulawayo .

While back in England he married, but in

March 1896 was again settled with his wife on an estate in Matabeleland when the native
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rebellion broke out . He took a prominent part in the fighting which followed, and published an account of the
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campaign entitled
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Sunshine and Storm in Rhodesia (1896) . On the restoration of peace Selous settled in England . He continued, however, to make shooting and hunting expeditions—visiting
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Asia Minor,
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Newfoundland, the
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Canadian Rockies and other parts of the
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world . In none of his expeditions was his
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object the making of a " big bag," but as a hunter-naturalist and slayer of
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great game he ranks with the most famous of the world's sportsmen . Besides the
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works mentioned he published A Hunter's Wanderings in Africa (1881, 5th ed., 1907), Travel and Adventure in South-East Africa (1893), Sport and Travel, East and West (1900),
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Recent Hunting Trips in British North
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America (1907),
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African Nature Notes and Reminiscences (1908), a valuable addition to the knowledge of African
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fauna, and made numerous contributions to The Geographical Journal, the Field and other
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journals .

End of Article: FREDERICK COURTNEY SELOUS (1851- )
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