Robert Nisbet Bain


Robert Nisbet Bain was a British historian and linguist who worked for the British Museum.

Life

Bain was born in London in 1854 to David and Elizabeth Bain.
Bain was a fluent linguist who could use over twenty languages. Besides translating a number of books he also used his skills to write learned books on foreign people and folklore. Bain was a frequent contributor to the Encyclopædia Britannica. His contributions were biographies and varied from Andrew Aagensen to Aleksander Wielopolski. He taught himself Hungarian in order that he could read Mór Jókai in the original after first reading him in German. He translated from Finnish, Danish and Russian and also tackled Turkish authors via Hungarian. He was the most prolific translator into English from Hungarian in the nineteenth century. He married late and died young after publishing a wide range of literature from or about Europe.
He is buried in Brookwood Cemetery.

Works

Gustavus III. and his contemporaries 1746-1792. 2 Bände. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1894.The daughter of Peter the Great. A history of Russian diplomacy. Westminster: Archibald Constable, 1899Peter III. Emperor of Russian. The story of a crisis and a crime. London: Archibald Constable, 1902.

Translations

Russian Fairy Tales, 1892Cossack Fairy Tales and Folk Tales, London : Lawrence and Bullen 1894Turkish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales, 1896Tales from Tolstoi, 1901Tales from Gorky, 1902
Translations