Robin Hanbury-Tenison

Airling Robin Hanbury-Tenison OBE FRGS (born 7 May 1936)[1] is a Cornish explorer. He is president of the charity Survival International.

Life

Hanbury-Tenison grew up on an Anglo-Irish estate in County Monaghan in Ireland, the youngest child of five.[2]

In 1959, Hanbury-Tenison married Marika Hopkinson, and lived with her in a 14th-century farmhouse on Bodmin Moor; Marika became well known for her cookery books, published under her married name.[3] They had two children, Lucy (b. 1960) and Rupert (b. 1970).[4] Marika died in 1982.

In 1968 he travelled on a BBC-funded expedition in the Amazon, having a discussion with the ethnobotanist Conrad Gorinsky that led to the foundation of the charity Survival International; he became its first president.[5]

In 1971, he and Marika went on a three-month expedition, backed by Survival International, to visit and live among the Xingu people in Brazil, speaking with local people and studying their living conditions. In 1973, the Hanbury-Tenisons followed up their journey to Brazil with a three-month visit to Indonesia. They made their last research trip together in 1979, when they visited Malaysia as part of a Royal Geographical Society scientific expedition.[6]

Hanbury-Tenison and his second wife Louella own the farmhouse Cabilla Manor near Bodmin Moor, which is both their home and a bed and breakfast business.[7]

Awards and achievements

Hanbury-Tenison was the first person to travel overland from London to Sri Lanka; the first (1958) to cross South America overland at its widest point; the first to cross South America from north to south by river (1964–65); the first to navigate the Orinoco River by hovercraft; the first to ride the length of the Great Wall of China on horseback.[8] He was made an Officer of the British Empire in the 1981 New Year Honours.[9]

Books

For children

References

  1. "Birthday's today". The Telegraph. 7 May 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2014. Mr Robin Hanbury–Tenison, explorer, 77
  2. Bayley, Jon (25 April 2015). "Explorer Robin Hanbury-Tenison's year of epic challenges". Western Morning News.
  3. Hanbury Tenison, M. Deep-Freeze Cookery. 2nd edition. London. Pan Books, 1972, p. i.
  4. Robin Hanbury-Tenison Curriculum Vitae
  5. Hanbury-Tenison, Robin (1991). Worlds Apart: An Explorer's Life. Arrow Books. pp. 115–128.
  6. Patricia D. Netzley: Entry for Marika Hanbury-Tenison from The Encyclopedia of Women's Travel and Exploration (reproduced as entry for Marika Hanbury-Tenison at Wings WorldQuest)
  7. "Cabilla". Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  8. Smith, Nick (November 2006). "Robin Hanbury-Tenison". Geographical. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  9. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 48467. p. 12. 30 December 1980.

External links

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