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VISCOUNT STRANGFORD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 983 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VISCOUNT STRANGFORD  , an •Irish title held by the
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family of Smythe, from 1625, when it was conferred upon
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Sir Thomas Smythe (d . 1635) of Ostenhanger and
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Ashford, Kent, until 1869, when it became
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extinct . From Sir Thomas the title passed down to his descendant, Percy Clinton
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Sydney Smythe (178o-1855), who succeeded his
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father, Lionel, as 6th viscount in 1801 . Entering the
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diplomatic service in 18o2, Smythe represented his country at Lisbon, in Brazil, at
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Stockholm, Constantinople and St
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Petersburg, and in 1825 he was created a peer of the
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United
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Kingdom as Baron
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Penshurst . He had
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literary tastes, and in 1803 published Poems from the Portuguese of Camoens, with Remarks and Notes, Byron at this time describing him as " Hibernian Strangford "; he died on the 29th of May 1855 . His eldest son George Augustus Frederick Percy Sydney Smythe (1818-1857), who now became the 7th viscount, was associated with Disraeli and Lord John Manners in the conduct of the " Young England " party . He entered parliament in 1841, and was under-secretary for foregin affairs in 1845-1846, losing his seat at Canterbury in 1852 . In 1852 he fought a duel at
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Weybridge with Colonel Frederick Romilly (1810-1887), the last encounter of this kind in England . Like his father, Smythe had literary tastes, and he is thought to be the
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original of Disraeli's Coningsby . In 1844 he wrote Historic Fancies, a collection of poems and essays, and his novel Angelo Pisani was published posthumously, with a memoir of the author in 1875 . As a journalist he wrote in the
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Morning Chronicle . He died on the 23rd of November 1857, and was succeeded by his
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brother Percy Ellen Frederick William Sydney Smythe (1826-1869) as 8th viscount .

Born at St Petersburg on the 26th of November 1826, during all his earlier years Percy Smythe was nearly blind, in
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con-sequence, it was believed, of his
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mother having suffered very
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great hardships on a journey up the Baltic in wintry weather shortly before his birth . His
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health through
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life was very delicate, but did not prevent his showing quite early most remarkable powers of mind . His
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education was begun at
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Harrow, whence he went to Merton College, Oxford . From the very first he gave proofs of extraordinary ability as a linguist, and was nominated by the
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vice-chancellor of Oxford in 1845 a student-attache at Constantinople . A very interesting account of his colleagues, more especially of Mr Almerick Wood, who was a man of phenomenal capacity, was written by him later in life, and is to be found in the two volumes of his collected essays published by his widow . While at Constantinople, where he served under Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, Percy Smythe gained a mastery not only of
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Turkish and its dialects, but of almost every form of
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modern Greek, from the language of the literati of Athens to the least Hellenized Romaic . Before he went to the East he had a large knowledge both of Persian and Arabic, but until his duties led him to study the past,
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present and future of the sultan's
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empire he had given no attention to the tongues which he well described as those of the international
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rabble in and around the
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Balkan peninsula . He made, while in the East, a careful study of these, and was the first
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English-man to see that the Bulgarians were much more likely than the Servians to come to the front as the
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Ottoman power declined . He avowed himself a Liberal in English politics, and those with whom he chiefly lived were Liberals; but he was not an anti-Turk, as so many Liberals afterwards became . Onsucceeding to the peerage in 1857 he did not abandon the East, but lived on at Constantinople for several years, immersed in
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Oriental studies . At length, however, he returned to England and began to write a great
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deal, sometimes in the Saturday Review, sometimes in the Quarterly, and much in the
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Pall Mall
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Gazette . A rather severe review in the first of these
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organs of the
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Egyptian Sepulchres and Syrian Shrines of Emily Anne Beaufort (d .

1887) led to a result not very usual—the

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marriage of the reviewer and' of the authoress . One of the most interesting papers Lord Strangford ever wrote was the last chapter in his wife's
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book on the Eastern Shores of the Adriatic . That chapter was entitled "
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Chaos," and was the first of his writings which made him widely known amongst careful students of
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foreign politics . From that time forward everything that he wrote was watched with intense
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interest, and even when it was
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anonymous there was not the slightest difficulty in recognizing his style, for it was unlike any other . He died in
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London on the 9th of
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January 1869, when his titles became extinct . A Selection from the Writings of Viscount Strangford on
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Political,
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Geographical and Social Subjects was edited by his widow and published in 1869 . His Original Letters and Papers upon
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Philology and Kindred Subjects were also edited by Lady Strangford (1878) . See E . B. de Fonblanque, Lives of the Lords Strangford through Ten Generations (1877) .

End of Article: VISCOUNT STRANGFORD
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