George Frederick Leycester Marshall
Major-General George Frederick Leycester Marshall CIE (27 March 1843 Bridgnorth, Salop – 7 March 1934) was the son of William Marshall (a clergyman) and his wife Louisa Sophia, also brother of C. H. T. Marshall and uncle of Guy Anstruther Knox Marshall. He became a colonel in the Indian Army and was a naturalist interested in the birds and butterflies of India. Marshall described several new species of butterflies, along with Lionel de Nicéville, and discovered the white-tailed iora, sometimes referred to as Marshall's iIora. He wrote The butterflies of India, Burmah and Ceylon.
Marshall retired from the Royal (late Bengal) Engineers in November 1897.[1] Marshall married Elizabeth Huntley Muir (1851, Agra - 1913) at Allahabad in 1874. One son George Leycester Knox (born 1875) died young at Simla on 20 July 1883.[2] Marshall was made CIE in the 1893 New Year Honours.
Works
- Marshall, G.F.L. (1877). Birds' nesting in India. A calendar of the breeding seasons, and a popular guide to the habits and haunts of birds. Calcutta: Calcutta Central Press. OCLC 562551302. Retrieved 15 April 2020.[3]
- 1883 with de Nicéville, L. Butterflies of India, Burmah and Ceylon. Vol. 1. Repr. 1979, New Delhi, 327 pp.
- 1886. The Butterflies of India, Burmah and Ceylon. Vol. 2. Repr. 1979, New Delhi, 332 pp.
- 1890. The butterflies of India, Burmah and Ceylon. Vol. 3. Repr. 1979, New Delhi, 503 pp.
Arms
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References
- London Gazette, December 21, 1897. p. 7650
- Irving, Miles (1910). A list of inscriptions on Christian tombs or monuments in the Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Kashmir and Afghanistan. Lahore: Punjab Government Press.
- Marshall 1877: second digital copy in BHL, and third.
- "Grants and Confirmations of Arms Vol. J". National Library of Ireland. p. 409. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
External links
- The Butterflies of India, Burmah and Ceylon. Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3
- Birds' nesting in India. A calendar of the breeding seasons, and a popular guide to the habits and haunts of birds. (1877)