Page:Journal of the Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (IA journalof788019181919roya).pdf/179

 The Circumstances attending the Murder in 1859, of the Botanist James Motley.

In Britten and Boulger's useful Biographical Index of British and Irish Botanists (London, 1893) the following is the entry regarding James Motley, its abbreviations expanded for clearness:—

, (fl. 1847-55). Murdered in Borneo by Mohammedan settlers. Of Aberafon, Glamorganshire, and afterwards of Labuan. Contrib.[utor] to Phyt.[ologist] ii. (1847) and Journ.[al of] Bot.[any], 1847 and [of] Carmar—then plants to Top.[ographical] Bot.[any], (551). Collected in Malaya, 1852-55. [Published "Contrib.[utions] to [the] Nat.[ural] Hist.[ory] of Labuan" (with L. L. Dillwyn), 1855. Plants [collected by him are] at Kew. [Vide] Linn.[ean Society's] "Trans.[actions], xxiii, 157; R.[oyal] S.[ociety's] C.[atalogue], iv, 495. [Commemorated in], Hook. f.

The statement that he was murdered by Mohammedan settlers is derived from the Transactions of the Linnean Society, loc. cit., where Sir Joseph Hooker in dedicating to him the jungle water-lily, Barclaya Motleyi, states that the examination of it was almost the last botanical work that he did. The implication that the murder was done in 1855 arises from want of evidence as to the date. But the events which led up to his death are recorded in the Singapore Free Press for 1859; and as apparently there appears to be only one file of the paper existing, it seems desirable to recall them. The word "settlers" disappears from the story.

James Motley was a Civil Engineer, who about 1852 went to Labuan in connection with coal-mining there, and became later the Superintendent of the coal-mining operations of a private company upon a concession in the territory of the Sultan of Banjermassin. This concession was along the Sungei Banyu Irang at two or three days journey to the south of Banjermassin town. There he was in 1850. In the very commencement of that year sinister whispers of sedition brewing in Banjermassin reached the Dutch Government in Batavia; but so badly was the Government served by their Resident at the Sultan's court that they were told in answer to their immediate enquiries that it was nothing. It was in fact a court-intrigue to replace the ruler by his brother, and, in doing so, to overthrow Dutch authority by which the reigning