Editing Pirate-King Leopold

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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamford_Raffles Sir Thomas Stamford Bingley Raffles] governed multiple territories in what is now mostly the country of Indonesia in the early 19th century. He is best known for his book on the history of the island of Java, as a founder and the first president of the Zoological Society of London, and for increasing British influence in East and Southeast Asia, most prominently by ensuring sea access through control of Singapore. He is also credited as the founder of the contemporary country of Singapore, although he was not responsible for most of the early groundwork. Β 
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamford_Raffles Sir Thomas Stamford Bingley Raffles] governed multiple territories in what is now mostly the country of Indonesia in the early 19th century. He is best known for his book on the history of the island of Java, as a founder and the first president of the Zoological Society of London, and for increasing British influence in East and Southeast Asia, most prominently by ensuring sea access through control of Singapore. He is also credited as the founder of the contemporary country of Singapore, although he was not responsible for most of the early groundwork. Β 


Raffles was broadly respectful to Southeast Asian culture, languages, and religions during his career, and made keen efforts to learn about and document all of the above. He also extensively documented, and collected specimens of, the flora and fauna of the territories he governed. While the primary goals of his tenure were to improve local infrastructure and reduce the extent of slavery and substance abuse (as he could not curtail them entirely), it is understandable that his legacy is complicated due to his status as a colonial governor and a key enactor of British rule in the region. Several species are named after him, as is the genus ''Rafflesia'' - which some may consider to be both figuratively and literally on the nose, considering that its constituents are parasitic corpse flowers that smell like rot to attract flies.
Raffles was broadly respectful to Southeast Asian culture, languages, and religions during his career, and made keen efforts to learn about and document these. He also extensively documented, and collected specimens of, the flora and fauna of the territories he governed. While the primary goals of his tenure were to improve local infrastructure and reduce the extent of slavery and substance abuse (as he could not curtail them entirely), it is understandable that his legacy is complicated due to his status as a colonial governor and a key enactor of British rule in the region. Several species are named after him, as is the genus ''Rafflesia'' - which some may consider to be both figuratively and literally on the nose, considering that its constituents are parasitic corpse flowers that smell like rot to attract flies.


The real Leopold Raffles died in a dysentery epidemic in 1821 at the age of three, hence the suggestion that in the world of ''Fallen London'' and ''Sunless Sea'', he was fed a part or product of the Exile's Rose in an attempt to cure him. The epidemic also claimed the lives of his siblings, who were all under the age of four. Sir Stamford Raffles died in 1826, in his forties, of a stroke caused by an underlying and unconfirmable neurological condition.
The real Leopold Raffles died in a dysentery epidemic in 1821 at the age of three, hence the suggestion that in the world of ''Fallen London'' and ''Sunless Sea'', he was fed a part or product of the Exile's Rose in an attempt to cure him. The epidemic also claimed the lives of his siblings, who were all under the age of four. Sir Stamford Raffles died in 1826, in his forties, of a stroke caused by an underlying and unconfirmable neurological condition.
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