Augustus Henry Mounsey (27 August 1834 – 10 April 1882) was a British diplomat. His firsthand account of the Japanese Satsuma Rebellion published in 1879 gives the most detailed descriptions of the military campaigns of the rebellion.[3]
Life
Augustus Henry Mounsey was the fourth son of George Gill Mounsey of Castletown House near Carlisle, Cumberland. Mounsey entered Rugby School in 1849 and completed his schooling there.[4]
Mounsey started his diplomatic career in Lisbon in 1857 and was promoted to Hanover in 1861 and to Vienna in 1862.[2]
Mounsey's The Satsuma Rebellion (1879), which chronicled the Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 and assassination of Ōkubo Toshimichi in 1877,[8] was noted by Shigeno Yasutsugu for its deviation from the East Asian historiography through annalistic records[9][10] and for its discussion beyond the immediate factors of the rebellion.[8] The book gives the most detailed descriptions of the military campaigns of the rebellion.[3]
^Mr. Mounsey entered Rugby School in August 1849, his entry being thus recorded in the Register: — " Mounsey Augustus Henry, son of George G. Mounsey, Esq. Castletown, near Carlisle, aged 15 years, nach: The Meteor, 1882, Ed. by members of Rugby school