Elizabeth Samson, wife of Otto, played an important part in the social network of academics and scholars to which they belonged. She hosted dinner parties and buffet suppers at their flat. She instigated the O.W. Samson Award in 1986-87. She died in 1994 after being knocked down, crossing the road.
Otto William Samson was born in Germany in 1900. After studying at the Universities of Freiburg, Berlin, Munich and Hamburg, he took up a position at the Hamburg Museum of Ethnology in 1928. He joined an ethnographical expedition in China but on returning to Germany in the early 1930s, found that, due to his Jewish ethnicity, his position at the Museum gradually became untenable. He moved to England in late 1933 after being dismissed from his post. Charles Gabriel Seligman found him work at University College's Galton Laboratory. He was awarded a travel grant from the Tweedie Exploration Fund administered by the University of Edinburgh's Faculty of Arts, which allowed him to undertake extensive research in India and Myanmar for two years. On his return he continued working at the Galton Laboratory but also volunteered in the Oriental Antiquities and Ethnography Department at the British Museum, a position which gradually became paid and full time through the Second World War. After the War he took up the position of Curator at the Horniman Museum, moving with his wife to live near the Museum. He modernised the museum and created important collections of musical instruments and masks. He was a member of the Royal Asiatic Society for more than thirty years and served on the Council in the 1960s. He died in 1976.
Samuel Davis was born in the West Indies where his father was Commissary General. After his father died he returned to England with his mother and siblings. He became an East India cadet in 1778, and sailed for India aboard the Earl of Oxford, arriving in Madras in 1780. In 1783 Warren Hastings assigned him as Draftsman and Surveyor on Samuel Turner's Mission to Bhutan and Tibet, but unable to enter Tibet he remained in Bhutan for the duration of the Mission.
On his return he was appointed Assistant to the Collector of Bhagalpur and Registrar of its Adalat Court. There he met William Jones and they became good friends, Davis also becoming a member of the Asiatic Society founded by Jones. He subsequently became Collector of Burdwan, a town in the Bengal Presidency, and from 1795-1800 was Magistrate of the district and city court in Benares. He continued in civil posts in India until his retirement in 1806 when he returned to England via St. Helena. He was elected as a Director of the East India Company on his return.
While in Burdwan, Davis married Henrietta Boileau and they had four sons and seven daughters. The eldest son, John Francis Davis, became the second Governor of Hong Kong. Davis died on 16 June 1819 at Birdhurst Lodge near Croyden in Surrey.
Saroj Nalini Arambam was born in Imphal, Manipur, in 1933. She was the first Meetei woman to graduate and gain her Masters degree at Calcutta University. She moved to Britain in the late 1950s studying for a Bachelor of Divinity degree at the University of London. She graduated in 1961 and shortly after married John Parratt. She worked at the University of Ile-Ife, Nigeria, before undertaking a PhD on the Religion of Manipur, in the Department of Asian Studies, Australia National University, for which she undertook considerable field research. From 1975-1990 she taught in institutions in southern Africa while still continuing to undertake fieldwork on Manipur. With her husband, she co-authored books on Manipur and, also produced two volumes of the Court Chronicle of the Kings of Manipur, published by the Royal Asiatic society, the second volume being published posthumously.