H. F. B. Lynch


Henry Finnis Blosse Lynch, MA, FRGS was a British traveller, businessman, and Liberal Member of Parliament.

Biography

Lynch was the only son of the Mesopotamian explorer Thomas Kerr Lynch, of a landed Irish family based at Partry House, County Mayo, and Harriet Taylor, the daughter of Colonel Robert Taylor, a British political resident at Baghdad, and his Armenian wife. He was educated at Eton College, the University of Heidelberg, and Trinity College, Cambridge. Although called to the bar from the Middle Temple in 1887, he eschewed a career in law in favour of working for his family business, Lynch Brothers, a commercial firm founded in Baghdad in 1841 which exported goods from Britain to Mesopotamia. He became the company's chairman in 1896.
Lynch was admitted as a freeman of the Worshipful Company of Bowyers of the City of London in 1888.
Lynch was elected at the 1906 general election as Member of Parliament for Ripon, but was defeated at the January 1910 general election.
He died of pneumonia at Calais in 1913.

Travel to Armenia

Lynch wrote a two-volume book on Armenia, which were published in 1901. A reviewer wrote in the journal Man: "The result is this magnificently printed and illustrated mixture of travel notes and impressions, historical and archeological research, political ratiocination, and geographical information." Another reviewer wrote in The Geographical Journal: "Mr. Lynch's book is full of information, but from a geographical point of view, it is somewhat disappointing. In the descriptions of scenery there is occasionally such a flow of words that the reader is apt to be wearied and lose the impression which the writer intends to convey." Martin Conway described it in 1916 as a "classical work on the country" and added that his "journeys in Armenia and close study of the country made him beyond question the greatest recent authority upon it."