Sir Robert Allason Furness | |
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Born | 1883 Rugby, England |
Died | 4 December 1954 Little Shelford, England |
Education | Rugby School |
Alma mater | King's College, Cambridge |
Sir Robert Allason Furness KBE CMG (1883 – 4 December 1954), also known as Robin Furness, was Professor of English at Cairo University and the representative in Egypt of the British Council between 1945 and 1950.[1][2][3][4] He was an expert adviser on the establishment of BBC Arabic, the BBC's first radio station to broadcast in Arabic.[5]
Shortly after Sir Robert's death, the writer and historian Hilary Wayment sent a tribute to The Times stating that Sir Robert 'seemed to have the gift of perpetual youth and to enter into the enthusiasms of his younger colleagues with the zest of an undergraduate'.[6] The tribute concluded that to his friends in England and Egypt, 'the lasting impression he will leave behind is one of generous and high-spirited enjoyments, and of sheer charm and quality of mind'.[6] He was also described as 'a very tall, elegant, sardonic man, learned about the poets of Ancient Alexandria, and with a line in extravagant bawdry'.[7]
robert allason furness cambridge.