Sandford Arthur Strong (10 April 1863 – 18 January 1904) was an English orientalist, art historian and librarian.[2]
Life
Born in Kensington in 1863, he was the second son of Thomas Banks Strong of the War Office, and his wife, Anna Lawson; his elder brother was Thomas Banks Strong. In 1877 he entered St Paul's School, London as a foundation scholar, but remained there for little more than a year. His next two years were passed as a clerk at Lloyd's, though during this time he also attended classes at King's College, London. As a boy he had been taught drawing by Albert Varley, who gave him a copy of Matthew Pilkington's Dictionary of Painters, and he frequented the National Gallery. In 1881 he matriculated with a Hutchinson studentship at St John's College, Cambridge. He graduated in 1884, with a third class in Part I of the classical tripos, being placed in the second class in Part II the following year. He proceeded M.A. in 1890.[3][4]
In 1897, Strong was also appointed librarian at the House of Lords. After a lingering illness, he died in London on 18 January 1904, and was buried in Brompton cemetery.
The Arthur Strong Oriental Library at University College, London was formed around his books, given by his widow.[3]
Works
Strong's major oriental publications were his editions of the Maha-Bodhi-Vamsa for the Pali Text Society (1891), and of the Futah al-Habashah or "Conquest of Abyssinia" (1894) (see Abyssinian–Adal war) for the Royal Asiatic Society's monographs. At his death he was engaged on the Arabic text of Ibn Arabshah's History of Yakmak, Sultan of Egypt, on Jaqmaq, the first part of which appeared in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society for 1904. As well as Sanskrit and Arabic, Strong studied Pali, Persian and Assyrian hieroglyphics and Chinese; on all these he wrote in learned publications, and he also contributed reviews to the Athenæum and The Academy.[3]
Among Strong's art publications the main ones were:[3]
Reproductions of Drawings by the Old Masters in the Collection of the Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery at Wilton House, 1900.
Preface to Plates of National Gallery Pictures, 1901, publishers Franz Hanfstaengl.
Masterpieces of the Duke of Devonshire's Collection of Pictures, 1901.
Reproductions of Drawings by the Old Masters at Chatsworth, 1902.
Catalogue of Letters and other Historical Documents in the Library of Welbeck, 1903.
At the House of Lords, Strong compiled two catalogues, one of the general library and one of the law books.[3]
Personal life
In 1897, Strong married Eugénie Sellers, the archaeologist, who survived him. There were no children of the marriage.[3]
Strong fell ill in the spring of 1903. Thought to be recovering, he died suddenly in January 1904, at only 40 years of age.[2]