Reginald Schomberg

Reginald Charles Francis Schomberg (1880–1958) was a British officer and explorer, who served in Asia.

Family and education
Schomberg was the son of Reginald Brodrick Schomberg (1848–1932) and Frances Sophia Schomberg (1839–1922), and a descendant of the physician Meyer Low Schomberg (1690–1761). He was educated at the Oratory School, Edgbaston, Birmingham (1892–8), then New College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1901.

Military and diplomatic career
Schomberg served mainly in Asia. His military career took him to India (1902–11), he served in the Malay states guides (early 1910s), he went to Mesopotamia (1915) and Palestine (1917), Malaya (1919), India (1922), and Ladakh (1923). He retired in 1927. He also held several diplomatic posts. He was British consul-general in French establishments in India (1936–37, 1938–41); and consul-general for Portuguese possessions in India (from 1939). He was consular liaison officer, Persia (1942–3), and customs officer, Perso-Indian frontier (1943–4). From 1944 to 1945 he was colonel in force 136 (part of the Special Operations Executive), China.

Travels
He made several journeys in Central Asia, in 1926, 1927–29 and 1930–31, Baltistan (1937), and Ladakh (1944, 1945, 1946).

Awards and honours

 * Royal Geographical Society's Gill memorial medal
 * 1937 C.I.E.

Publications

 * 1933 Peaks and Plains of Central Asia
 * 1935 Between the Oxus and the Indus
 * 1936 Unknown Karakorum
 * 1938 Kafirs and Glaciers

He also wrote articles and reviews for the Alpine Journal, the Geographical Journal, the Himalayan Journal, the Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, and the Scottish Geographical Journal.

Religious life
From 1947 to 1951, Schomberg studied for the priesthood in Rome, and subsequently worked in England: at Ringwood, Hampshire (1952–53), the Assisi Home, grayshot (1953–54), and the Sisters of St Joseph, Boars Hill, Oxford (1954–57).

He was buried at Belmont Abbey, Hereford.