British archaeologist and art historian
Albert Henry Longhurst (1876 – 1955) was a British archaeologist and art historian, working in India and Ceylon.
Albert Henry Longhurst was born in Great Bookham , Surrey, England in 1876, the third of seven children (second son) to David Longhurst and Mary née Ranger.
Longhurst was the brother-in-law of Sir John Marshall , the Director-General of the Archaeology Survey of India (1902-1928).
In October 1913 he was appointed the Superintendent of the Southern Circle, Archaeological Survey of India .
From 1927 to 1931 he was in charge of the systematic digging of Nagarjunakonda .[ 1]
Longhurst served as the Archaeological Commissioner, Archaeological Survey of Ceylon between 1934 and 1940,[ 2] mainly working at Polonnaruwa but also at Anuradhapura and Sigiriya , concentrating more on conservation/restoration rather than excavation.
Works
Archaeological Survey of India; Longhurst, Albert Henry (1917). Hampi Ruins Described and Illustrated . Madras : Superintendent, Government Press.
Longhurst, Albert Henry (1928). Pallava Architecture . Delhi: Cosmo Publications.
Longhurst, Albert Henry (1936). The Story of the Stupa . Colombo: Ceylon Government Press.
Excavations at Nagarjunakonda, 1929-1930.[ 3]
Longhurst, Albert Henry (1938). The Buddhist Antiquities of Nagarjunakonda, Madras Presidency . Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India .
Memoirs Of The Archaeological Survey Of India No.33 Pt.2 [2]
Longhurst, Albert Henry; Paranavitana, Senarath (1955). Archaeological Survey of Ceylon : Annual report 1935 - 1939 & 1940 - 1945 . Ceylon: Archaeological Survey of Ceylon .
References
^ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volume 72, Issue 2–3 June 1940 , pp. 226-227 [1]
^ "Ceylon Today". 5 . Ceylon Government Information Department. 1956: 50.
^ Buddhist Monks and Business Matters: Still More Papers on Monastic Buddhism in India, Gregory Schopen
University of Hawaii Press, 2004 p.380
External links
International National Other