Herbert Giles


Herbert Allen Giles (8 December, 1845 - 13 February, 1935) was a British diplomat and sinologist, educated at Charterhouse.

He modified a Mandarin Chinese Romanization system established by Thomas Wade earlier, resulting in the Wade-Giles Chinese transliteration system.

Giles was a diplomat to China (1867 – 1892). He was British Vice Consul at Pagoda Island (1880–83) and Shanghai (1883–85) and Consul at Tamsui (1885–91) and at Ningpo (1891–93) who later became the second professor of Chinese at Cambridge, succeeding Wade, after living in Aberdeen, Scotland. In 1902 he became first lecturer at Columbia University on the Lung Foundation.[1]

Father of the sinologist Lionel Giles, he spent a brief time at Fort Santo Domingo (1885-1888) in Tamsui, Taiwan.

Postal map spelling is also based on the Wade-Giles system described in his A Chinese-English Dictionary.

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