Urquhart, David
Related Category: British and Irish History: Biographies
(ûr´kərt), 180577, British diplomat and writer. He served (183137) in various diplomatic capacities in Constantinople but was recalled because of his hostility to Russia. Subsequently in Parliament (184752) and through the press he attacked the British government's Middle Eastern policies, deprecating the interference in Turkey's domestic affairs before the Crimean War. As vehicles for his views, Urquhart founded the
Portfolio (1835) and the
Free Press (1855; called the
Diplomatic Review after 1866). His numerous writings include
England, France, and Turkey (1834) and
The Crisis (1840).
See biography by G. Robinson (1920, repr. 1970).