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See also: British diplomatist and publicist, See also: born at Braelangwell, Cromarty
.
He came of a See also: good Scottish See also: family and was educated in See also: France, See also: Switzerland and See also: Spain, and then at St See also: John's
See also: College, See also: Oxford
.
In 1827 he went under See also: Lord Cochrane (Dundonald) to fight for the Greeks in the War of Independence; he was See also: present at the See also: action of the 28th of See also: September when Captain Hastings destroyed the See also: Turkish See also: squadron in the See also: Bay of Salona, and as See also: lieutenant of the See also: frigate " Hellas " he was severely wounded in the attack on Scio
.
In See also: November 1828 he See also: left the See also: Greek service
.
In 183o he privately examined the new Greek frontier as determined by the protocol of See also: March 22, 1829, and the value of his reports to the
See also: government led to his being named British See also: commissioner to accompany See also: Prince Leopold of See also: Coburg to See also: Greece, but the See also: appointment See also: fell to the ground with that prince's refusal of the Greek See also: throne
.
His knowledge of the See also: local conditions, however, led to his being appointed in November 1831 attache to See also: Sir Stratford Canning (Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, q.v.), ambassador extraordinary to the sultan, for the purpose of finally deliminating the frontiers of See also: Turkey and Greece
.
On his return to See also: England he published in 1833 Turkey and its Resources, a violent denunciation of See also: Russia
.
In 1833 he was sent on a secret See also: mission to Turkey to inquire into possible openings for British See also: trade, and at Constantinople he gained the See also: complete confidence of the Turkish government
.
The situation, however, was a delicate one, and Urquhart's out-spoken advocacy of British intervention on behalf of the sultan against Mehemet See also: Ali, the policy of Stratford Canning, made him a danger to See also: international See also: peace; he was consequently recalled by Palmerston
.
At this See also: time appeared his pamphlet England, France, Russia and Turkey, the violent See also: anti-See also: Russian character of which brought him into conflict with See also: Richard See also: Cobden
.
In 1835 he was appointed secretary of See also: embassy at Constantinople, but an unfortunate attempt to counteract Russian aggressive designs in See also: Circassia, which threatened to See also: lead to an international crisis, again led to his recall in 1837
.
In 1835, before leaving for the See also: East, he founded a periodical called the Portfolio, and in the first issue printed a series of Russian See also: state papers, which made a profound impression
.
From 1847 to 1852 he sat in parliament as member for Stafford, and carried on a vigorous crusade against Lord Palmerston'sSee also: foreign policy
.
The action of England in the See also: Crimean War provoked indignant protests from Urquhart, who contended that Turkey was in a position to fight her own battles without the assistance of other See also: Powers
.
To attack the government, he organized " foreign affairs committees " which became known as " Urquhartite," throughout the country, and in 1855 founded the See also: Free See also: Press (in 1866 renamed the See also: Diplomatic Review), which numbered among its contributors the socialist Karl See also: Marx
.
In 186o he published his See also: book on The See also: Lebanon
.
From 1864 until his See also: death Urquhart's See also: health compelled him to live on the continent, where he devoted his energies to promoting the study of international See also: law
.
He died on the 16th of May 1877
.
His wife (Harriet See also: Chichester Fortescue), by whom he had two sons and two daughters, and who died in 1889, wrote numerous articles in the Diplomatic Review over the signature of " Caritas."
To Urquhart is due the introduction into See also: Great Britain of hot-air Turkish See also: baths
.
He advocated their use in his book called Pillars of Hercules (185o), which attracted the See also: attention of the Irish physician Dr Richard See also: Baxter (1802-1870), and the latter introduced them in his See also: system of See also: hydropathy at See also: Blarney, Co
.
See also: Cork
.
The Turkish baths in Jermyn Street, See also: London, were built under Urquhart's direction
.
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