David Snellgrove Explained

Birth Name:David Llewellyn Snellgrove
Birth Date:1920 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Portsmouth, Hampshire, England
Death Place:Pinerolo, Italy
Fields:Tibetology
Workplaces:School of Oriental and African Studies
Known For:Study of Tibet

David Llewellyn Snellgrove, FBA (29 June 192025 March 2016) was a British Tibetologist noted for his pioneering work on Buddhism in Tibet as well as his many travelogues.

Biography

Snellgrove was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire, and educated at Christ's Hospital near Horsham in West Sussex. He went on to study German and French at Southampton University. In 1941 he was called up to do his military service as a member of the Royal Engineers. He attended the Officers Cadet Training Unit in the Scottish seaside town of Dunbar, and was commissioned as an infantry officer. Thereafter he attended various intelligence courses and further training at the War Office in London, from where he requested a posting to India.[1]

Snellgrove arrived in Bombay in June 1943, and travelled cross-country to Calcutta. He was stationed at Barrackpore, some way up the Hooghly River. A few months after beginning his posting he contracted malaria and was sent to the military hospital at Lebong, just north of Darjeeling. It was while he was at Lebong that he began his future life's calling by purchasing some books about Tibet by Charles Bell as well as a Tibetan Grammar and Reader.[2]

Snellgrove returned to Darjeeling, from where he sometimes went on leave to Kalimpong. On one of these visits he took a young Tibetan into his personal employ in order to have someone with whom to practise speaking Tibetan. He also travelled in the small Himalayan state of Sikkim, and on one such visit he met Sir Basil Gould, who was then the British Representative for Tibet. Inspired to work in Tibet, in 1946 after he left the Army he sat the entrance exams for the Indian Civil Service. This was the first time the exams had been held since the start of the war, and the last time they were ever held. Although he passed the exams, he was not able to take up an appointment in India. Having already begun to study Tibetan, he resolved to find a university where he could further his studies. However, as no university offered courses in Tibetan at that time he was convinced by Sir Harold Bailey that a sound knowledge of Sanskrit and Pali would be beneficial, so he gained entry to Queens' College, Cambridge in October 1946.[3] While at Cambridge, he converted to Roman Catholicism, in part through the influence of his friend Bede Griffiths.[4]

In 1950, after having completed his studies at Cambridge, he was invited to teach a course in elementary Tibetan at the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London.[5] He was Professor of Tibetan at SOAS until his retirement in 1982.[6] Snellgrove's research subsequent to his retirement was focused increasingly upon the art history of South East Asia. He died on 25 March 2016 in Pinerolo, Italy.[7]

Snellgrove was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1969.[8]

Bibliography

Books and articles

With Hugh Richardson

Reviews

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: David Snellgrove interviewed by Sara Shneiderman and Mark Turin in Torre Pellice, Piedmont, Italy, on 20th September 2004 .
  2. Book: Skorupski, Tadeusz . Indo-Tibetan studies: Papers in Honour and Appreciation of Professor David L. Snellgrove's Contribution to Indo-Tibetan Studies . Institute of Buddhist Studies . Tring . 1990 . 2–3 . 978-0-9515424-1-5 .
  3. Turin . Mark . Snellgrove . David . Shneiderman . Sara . Interview with David Snellgrove . Apollo – University of Cambridge Repository . 2004-11-10 . 2024-05-10 . mp4 video.
  4. Web site: Snellgrove, D. . Buddha-Nature . 2016-03-25 . 2024-05-11.
  5. Web site: Tibetan Studies at SOAS . 27 April 2010 . 12 June 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100612170526/http://www.soas.ac.uk/cia/tibetanstudies/ . dead .
  6. Book: Facing Mount Kanchenjunga . Windhorse Publications . 2018 . 978-1-911407-17-1 . id . 2024-05-11 . 781.
  7. Book: Rice . H. . Cole . J. . Flight of the Bön Monks: War, Persecution, and the Salvation of Tibet's Oldest Religion . Inner Traditions/Bear . 2024 . 978-1-64411-859-7 . 2024-05-11 . 264.
  8. https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/fellows/david-snellgrove-FBA/ "Professor David Snellgrove FBA"