Fellows of the Society and guests. At each Anniversary
General Meeting we commemorate the inauguration of
the Society in 1823 and reaffirm our founders’
commitment to the encouragement of research and the
dissemination of learning in relation to Asia. In
his address at the first meeting, Henry Colebrooke
declared that Britain owed a “debt of gratitude” to
Asia and had a duty to repay its “obligation” by
“promoting an interchange of benefits”. It was a
time of vigorous British expansion in Asia; but it
was also a time of woeful indifference in Britain to
Asian societies and cultures. In those days
universities did little to make good such neglect.
Indeed, lamenting the ignorance of Asia in British
public life, another founder-member of the Society,
Sir George Staunton, would later emphasise its
educational function. It was, he said “the province
of the Royal Asiatic Society . . . to bring together
into one focus those who are able to impart this
knowledge, and those who are desirous to receive
it”. Clearly the RAS was established to meet a
national need, as were other learned societies of
the same era, such as the Royal Astronomical Society
formed three years earlier, the Zoological Society
of London formed three years later and the Royal
Geographical Society which came into being in
1830.