Like a number of other learned societies founded in the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the
Royal Asiatic Society was established to support
research and to disseminate knowledge to the public.
It depends for its charitable status and the
privileges attached to its Royal Charter on
upholding these objectives. The Society has a good
record in this respect, extending now over 186
years. To some degree, the work of the learned
societies was first intruded on, and then taken over
by, the universities as they grew in number,
expanded their curricula, and went in for research
as well as teaching. This was particularly true of
the twentieth century where, in our field of
interest, Asian studies in the humanities and social
sciences became firmly lodged in several
universities in the United Kingdom. But there always
remained a place, particularly one where
professional academics and the wider public could
meet, for Society's such as ours to flourish; and,
looking ahead, as university budgets come under
greater pressure, I foresee a growing role for the
Royal Asiatic Society in the future in ensuring that
the interest and importance of understanding Asian
societies and cultures remains in the forefront of
the public mind.