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John Giffening

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John Frederick Giffening
Burgher member of the Legislative Council of Ceylon
In office
1843–1851
Preceded byJ. G. Hillebrand
Succeeded byRichard Morgan
Personal details
Born
Johan Frederick Giffening

4 February 1787
Colombo, Ceylon
Died25 September 1851(1851-09-25) (aged 64)
Colombo, Ceylon
SpouseHenrietta Matilda Toussaint
Childrenseven

John Frederick Giffening (4 February 1787 - 25 September 1851) was a Ceylonese proctor, public notary and politician.

Early life and education

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John Frederick Geffening was born on 4 February 1787 in Colombo, Ceylon, the son of Reverend Bernhard Abraham Giffening (1762-1812), the head of the Dutch Reformed Church in Ceylon, and Maria Sophia née Francius (1754-1812). In 1796 the British formally took control of the Dutch colonies in Ceylon, with all the Dutch colonists who agreed to stay signing a treaty of capitulation, which guaranteed they would remain loyal and not defect if the Dutch attempted to re-conquer Ceylon. In 1807 Giffening was appointed as a proctor (a position similar to a solicitor) of the District Court and in 1811 a proctor of the Supreme Court.[1][2]

Professional career

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He was subsequently appointed as one of the three proctors sitting on the bench of the Supreme Court of Ceylon (known as the Vice Admiralty Court).[3] He also served on the Board of Examiners for many years, who James de Alwis described as being an old, narrow-minded austere but clever Dutch lawyer.[4] In 1843 he was appointed as the second unofficial member of the Legislative Council of Ceylon, representing the Burgher community, replacing J. G. Hillebrand, following the later's appointment as a Judge of the Supreme Court.[5][6]

Personal life

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Giffening married Henrietta Matilda Toussaint (1837-?) on 15 September 1858 at Wolvendaal Church.[7] They had seven children: John Frederick (1859-1929); Edwin Arnold (b.1861); Dorothy Henrietta (b.1863); Peter Bernard Toussaint (1864-1925); Frederica Anna (1866-1938); Julian Theodore Louis (1870-1944); and Georgiana Matilda (c.1877-1944).

He died on 25 September 1851 in Colombo, at the age of 64. Richard Morgan was subsequently appointed to his seat on the Legislative Council.[5][8]

References

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  1. ^ The Ceylon Directory: Calendar and Compendium of Useful Information" (1866). LII
  2. ^ "Ceylon Almanac and Compendium of useful information". Colombo: Govt. Press. 1833. nla.obj-24678246. Retrieved 16 November 2022 – via Trove.
  3. ^ "The Ceylon Almanac and Compendium" (PDF). Colombo: A. De Krester. 1850. p. 133.
  4. ^ Amerasinghe, A. R. B. (1986) The Supreme Court of Sri Lanka: The First 185 Years. Sri Lanka Sarvodaya Book Publishing Services
  5. ^ a b Toussaint, J. R. (July 1945). "Journal of the Dutch Burger Union of Ceylon" (PDF). Burgher Members in Council. XXV. Dutch Burgher Union of Ceylon: 2-3.
  6. ^ Muller, J. B. "A Burgher perspective on politics in Sri Lanka today". The Daily News. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  7. ^ Journal of the Dutch Burgher Union of Ceylon (1909) Dutch Burgher Union of Ceylon: 33
  8. ^ Digby, William. Forty Years of Official and Unofficial Life in an Oriental Crown Colony: Being the Life of Sir Richard F. Morgan, Kt., Queen's Advocate and Acting Chief Justice of Ceylon. Sri Lanka: Higginbotham (1879)