Charles Otto Blagden (6September 1864 – 25August 1949)[1][2] was an English Orientalist and linguist who specialised in the Malay, Mon and Pyu languages. He is particularly known for his studies of Burmese epigraphic inscriptions in the Mon and Pyu scripts.
In 1888 Blagden was appointed to the Straits Settlements civil service in Malaya, where he held a number of administrative and judicial posts in Malacca and Singapore[3] In 1897 he returned to England due to ill health, and the following year he became a Holt Scholar of Gray's Inn in London. In 1897 he was called to the bar, and for the next seventeen years he practiced law, co-authoring a number of legal works, whilst continuing to publish academic articles on Malay, Mon and Pyu.[1]
In 1916 the School of Oriental Studies (later School of Oriental and African Studies) was founded as a constituent college of the University of London, in order to promote the teaching of Asian languages and to train colonial officials for the British Empire, admitting its first students in January 1917. Blagden had been acting as an examiner in Malay for the University of London since 1910,[3] and in 1917 he was appointed as Lecturer in Malay at the School of Oriental Studies. He was later promoted to Reader and then Dean, before retiring in 1935.[1]
In the 1950s Gordon Luce revealed plans to "complete and publish Blagden’s long-planned grammar and etymological dictionary of Old Mon", plans which, despite Luce's "tremendous effort", were not to be realised.[4]
Works
1898. "The medieval chronology of Malacca".
1902. "A Malayan element in some of the languages of Southern Indo-China". In Journal of the Straits Branch, Royal Asian Society no. 38.
1906. With Walter William Skeat. Pagan races of the Malay Peninsula. London, Macmillan and Co.
1906. "Siam and the Malay Peninsula". In Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society.
1909. "Notes on Malay history". In Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society.
1910. "Quelques notions sur la phonétique du Talain et son évolution historique". In Journal asiatique.
1912. "Notes on Talaing epigraphy".
1914. "The Pyu inscriptions". In Epigraphica Indica vol. 12 no. 16: 127–137.
1917. With Richard Winstedt. A Malay Reader. Oxford : Clarendon Press.
1920. Môn Inscriptions. Rangoon: Government Printery and Stationery.
1928. "The inscriptions of the Kalyāṇīsīmā, Pegu". In Epigraphia Birmanica.