Henry Elliot
{{Short description|British diplomat}}
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Sir Henry George Elliot {{postnominals|country=GBR|GCB|KCMG|PC}} (30 June 1817 – 30 March 1907) was a British diplomat. He was the second son of Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 2nd Earl of Minto. He was most noted for his period as ambassador at Constantinople, and his participation in the 1876-77 Constantinople Conference. Elliot took a pro-Turkish line despite the ‘Bulgarian atrocities’.{{Cite book |last= Pears |first=Edwin |year=1916 |title=Forty Years in Constantinople, The Recollections of Sir Edwin Pears 1873-1915 |publisher=Herbert Jenkins Limited |place=London |edition= 1 |pages= 16–21 |url=https://archive.org/stream/fortyyearsincons00pearuoft#page/16/mode/2up |accessdate=18 March 2016 |via= Internet Archive}} He argued in a dispatch he made on 4 September 1876 "that British interests in preventing change in the Turkish empire were 'not affected by the question whether it was 10,000 or 20,000 persons who perished in the suppression'.Matthew, quoting R.T. Shannon (1963), Gladstone and the Bulgarian agitation, 1876, 23.See also {{London Gazette|issue=24365|date=19 September 1876 |page=5115}} As a result of the unpopularity in Britain of his pragmatism in the face of atrocities he was relocated to Vienna in 1877. He died at home (Ardington House near Wantage) in 1907.http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/33002?docPos=1 H. C. G. Matthew, 'Elliot, Sir Henry George (1817–1907)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004;The Times, Monday, 1 April 1907; pg. 7; Issue 38295; col F Death of Sir Henry Elliot.
Education
Elliot was educated at Eton College and then Trinity College, Cambridge.{{acad|id=ELT835HG|name=Elliot, or Elliott, the Hon. Henry George}} He did not take a degree.
Early employment
Elliot's first proper employment was to work as the aide-de-camp and private secretary to Sir John Franklin in Tasmania. He worked there from 1836 to 1839. In 1840 he worked at the Foreign Office as a précis writer for Lord Palmerston at the Foreign Office.
Diplomatic service
In 1841 Elliot entered the diplomatic service. His first posting was as an attaché at St Petersburg. This was followed first, in 1848 by a position as a secretary to the legation at The Hague then in 1853 to Vienna and then in 1858 he was appointed Minister at Copenhagen.
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Matthew's judgement on Elliot
H. C. G. Matthews, in the concluding paragraph of Elliot's entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, notes that:
:To have annoyed both Salisbury and Gladstone was unusual. Elliot, in fact, represented the accepted Foreign Office view of his day as to the need to maintain the Porte. His illiberal statements of 1876–7 should not mask his overall competence in maintaining whiggish objectives of liberal constitutionalism, at least in western Europe.
Meyer's judgement on Elliot
Elliot's role as Ambassador to Constantinople was a central theme in a book and BBC Four TV programme aired 22 February 2010 written and presented by Sir Christopher Meyer, former British Ambassador to the US. Meyer examined the possibility of an ethical foreign policy. The programme argued that Elliot supported Turkey because it acted as a bulwark between Russia and the UK's interests in the middle-east and India. Elliot's critics accused him of turning "native" but he argued, and the programme lent support to this view, that there were capital considerations they had not taken into account.http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00r06j3 BBC4 Getting Our WayMeyer, Christopher (2009) Getting Our Way: 500 Years of Adventure and Intrigue: the Inside Story of British Diplomacy, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, {{ISBN|978-0-297-85875-1}}
References
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External links
- {{UK National Archives ID}}
- [https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1877/mar/27/sir-henry-elliot-observations SIR HENRY ELLIOT.—OBSERVATIONS. (Hansard, 27 March 1877)]
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{{Succession box| title=British Minister to Denmark | before=? | after=Sir Augustus Paget | years=1858–1859}}
{{Succession box| title=British Minister to the Two Sicilies | before=? | after=? | years=1859–1860}}
{{Succession box| title=British Minister to Italy and the Holy See | before=Sir James Hudson | after=Sir Augustus Paget | years=1863–1867}}
{{Succession box| title=British Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire | before=The Lord Lyons | after=Sir Henry Layard | years=1867–1877}}
{{Succession box| title=British Ambassador to Austria | before=Sir Andrew Buchanan | after=Sir Augustus Paget | years=1877–1884}}
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Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
Category:Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Category:Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom
Category:People educated at Eton College
Category:Younger sons of earls
Category:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to the Ottoman Empire
Category:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to Denmark
Category:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to the Holy See
Category:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to Italy
Category:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to Austria-Hungary