Max Henry Ferrars | |
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Born | Killucan, Ireland | 28 October 1846
Died | 17 February 1933 | (aged 86)
Nationality | British |
Education | Trinity College Dublin |
Alma mater | Royal Saxon Academy of Forestry, Kingdom of Saxony |
Occupation(s) | colonial officer, author, photographer and university lecturer |
Known for | ethnographical accounts and photographs of 19th-century Burma |
Spouse | Bertha Ferrars |
Family | Elizabeth Ferrars |
Max Henry Ferrars (28 October 1846 – 7 February 1933) was a British colonial officer, author, photographer and university lecturer, mainly active in British Burma and later, in Freiburg, Germany. He served for 25 years in the Imperial East India Forestry Service and other public offices in colonial Burma, today's Myanmar. Together with his wife Bertha, Ferrars wrote and illustrated an extensive ethnographical and photographic study of the native cultures and societies, titled Burma and published in 1900.[1][2] Further, Max and Bertha Ferrars were the grandparents of the British novelist Elizabeth Ferrars.
From the 2000s onwards, Ferrars' life and work were primarily recognized by the Royal Geographical Society and the ethnographical museum in Freiburg, to which he had donated a number of Burmese cultural objects.
The 2011 collection on articles on Bamar people at Human Relations Area Files called the book "chiefly remarkable for a wealth of photographs on all topics. These are unequalled in the literature."