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Hartog, Sir Philip Joseph (1864-1947) the first Vice Chancellor of the university of dhaka. A British national Philip Joseph Hartog was born on 2 March 1864 in London. His father Alphonse Hartog belonged to a Jewish family which had left Holland and settled in Paris.
Hartog started his career as an Assistant Lecturer in Chemistry at the Owens College, London, in 1891. He was for sometime the part time secretary to the Victoria University extension scheme of which Tout was the chairman. He had a distinguished record as Academic Registrar of the University of London for 17 years since 1903. He was made the Crown representative on the governing body of the university in 1916. Hartog joined the newly established Dhaka University as its first Vice Chancellor on 10 December 1920, and continued to serve the University till December 1925. The Governor General of India appointed him CIE in December 1920. Dhaka University conferred upon him the honorary LLD in 1925. PJ Hartog was a member of the Calcutta University Commission (1917) of which Michael Sadlar was the chairman. He was a member of the Indian Public Service Commission, chairman of the Committee on Indian Education in 1928-29, and Director of the English Committee of an international body created to enquire into the reliability of examinations. Hartog was assigned to conduct part of the enquiries undertaken by the Indian Statutory Commission on Constitutional Advance in India. He was a member of the council of the liberal Jewish synagogue in London. He was appointed KBE in 1930. Hartog was well versed in English, German, French, Hindi, Urdu and Bangla. Some of his publications are An Examination of Examinations (1935), The Marks of Examination (1936), Culture : Its History and Meaning. He died on 27 June 1947. [Muazzam Hussain Khan] |
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