Anatole von Hügel

His family moved to England in 1867 after his father's retirement, and he was educated at Stonyhurst College.

From 1874 to 1878 he collected natural history specimens in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Samoa, and Java.

He became an authority on Fiji, after his lengthy travels in the practically unknown interior of Viti Levu to record the original Fijian culture before British colonisation.

There is a memorial plaque to Baron Anatole von Hügel on the wall in the St John Fisher chapel of Our Lady and the English Martyrs Church in Cambridge.

[2] 'Anatole von Hugel, Baron, Peter W. Allott in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography