Charles Kennedy (diplomat)

Sir Charles Kennedy, circa 1890s

Sir Charles Kennedy KCMG CB (12 October 1831 - 26 October 1908) was a senior British diplomat.

Early life

Charles Malcolm Kennedy was born in London, the son of James Kennedy, Member of Parliament for Tiverton, and was educated at Blundell's School in Tiverton and at Caius College at Cambridge (where he took two firsts).[1]

Diplomatic career

Kennedy entered the Foreign Office in 1852. He served chiefly in the commercial branch, attaining the senior clerkship there early in the 1870s. This was his substantive appointment for many years, but he was almost constantly engaged on special services abroad, in particular:

Later life

Kennedy received his knighthood in the Order of St Michael and St. George in 1893, and retired from the public service in the following year. About this time he was made Commander of the Order of Leopold.

From 1895 to 1902 Kennedy was lecturer on international Law at University College, Bristol, a number of those lectures being published.

Many years earlier he had edited "Kennedy's Ethnological and Linguistic Essays" and he was also chairman of the Exmouth School Board from 1896 to the dissolution of separate school authorities under Balfour's Act of 1902, and an active member of the council of the Society of Arts.

References

  1. "Kennedy, Charles Malcolm (KNDY850CM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.

External links


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