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William Turner (envoy)

William Turner
Born 5 September 1792
Yarmouth
Died 10 January 1867(1867-01-10) (aged 74)
Leamington
Resting place Birstall, Leicestershire
Nationality British
Occupation Diplomat
Notable work Journal of a Tour in the Levant (1820)
Spouse(s) Mary Anne Mansfield
Children Mansfield (d. 1901)
Mary Anne Elizabeth (1825–1894)
Relatives Sir George James Turner

William Turner (5 September 1792 – 10 January 1867) was a British diplomat and author.

Turner was born at Yarmouth on 5 September 1792, the son of Richard Turner (1751–1835)—lecturer, and afterwards perpetual curate of Great Yarmouth—by his second wife, Elizabeth (1761–1805), eldest daughter of Thomas Rede of Beccles. Sir George James Turner was his younger brother. On 10 April 1824, at St George's, Hanover Square, he married Mary Anne (1797–1891), daughter and coheir of John Mansfield of Birstall. By her he had one surviving son, Mansfield, and a daughter, Mary Anne Elizabeth (1825–1894), who married Walter Stewart Broadwood.

Turner's father, Richard, was a friend of George Canning, who gave William a post in the Foreign Office. In 1811 he was attached to the embassy of Sir Robert Liston, and accompanied him to Constantinople. He remained in the East for five years, and during that time visited most parts of the Ottoman Empire, as well as the islands and mainland of Greece. While in Asia Minor he endeavoured to emulate Leander and Lord Byron by swimming the Hellespont, and, failing in the attempt, palliated his ill-success by pointing out that he tried to swim from Asia to Europe, a far more difficult feat than Lord Byron's passage from Europe to Asia. Byron replied in a letter to John Murray published at the time, and Turner, in a counter rejoinder, overwhelmed his adversary with quotations from ancient and modern topographers. He published the results of his wanderings in 1820 under the title Journal of a Tour in the Levant.


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