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R. Grant Brown

881 bytes added, 16:18, 28 May 2020
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| honorific_suffix =
| image = File:Brown,_R._Grant.jpg
| birth_date = 1868| death_date = 1954| address = East India United Service Club, St James’s Square, SW; [and] c/o Postmaster, Rangoon [1907]<br />Club; [and] 3 Park Place, St James's, SW1 [1917]<br />Club; [and] 205 Lauderdale Mansions, W9 [1919]<br />Club; [and] c/o Messrs Thomas Cook and Sons, Ludgate Circus, EC4 [1921]<br />| occupation = civil service
| elected_ESL =
| elected_ASL =
| elected_LAS =
| membership = ordinary fellow
| left = 1921 last listed
| clubs = East India United Services Club
| societies = Royal Asiatic Society
}}
== Notes ==
Proposed by T.A. Joyce; seconded by William Gowland 1906.12.04
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
R. Grant Brown, who was a revenue officer for 28 years in Burma (1889–1917) <br /><br />Brown, George Eustace Riou Grant, b. 1868.<br /><br />17, Morton Crescent, Exmouth, Devon, late of the Indian Civil Service. 22nd March, 1954. [Address, description and date of death of Deceased]<br />
== Publications ==
=== External Publications ===
Lady of the Weir, The Paperback – 1916 <br />by R. Grant Brown (Author) <br /><br />Burma as I Saw It, 1889-1917: With a Chapter on Recent Events<br />1 Jan 1926 <br />by R. Grant Brown<br /><br />The Kadus of Burma / by R. Grant Brown<br /><br />The use of the Roman character for Oriental languages. <br />by Brown, George Eustace Riou Grant, b. 1868. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland.<br />Published 1912
=== House Publications ===
Tamans of the upper Chindwin, Burma 1911<br />Taungbyon festival, Burma 1915
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