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Alexander Condie Stephen
Dudley, England, 1850 - 1908, London
At the end of 1881 Stephen, who had been made CMG that year, was promoted second secretary and transferred to Tehran, being then in receipt of special allowances in respect of his knowledge of Russian, Turkish, and Persian. In 1882–3 he was employed on special service in Khorasan, the north-east province of Persia, at that time of critical importance as the neighbour both of Afghanistan and of that part of central Asia over which Russian power was extending. In 1884 Stephen was made CB, and in 1885 was appointed assistant commissioner to Sir Peter Lumsden in the Anglo-Russian Commission for the demarcation of the north-west boundary of Afghanistan. In this capacity he was present at the affray between Russian and Afghan troops at Panjdeh, which involved the danger of war between England and Russia, and he was sent home with the official dispatch describing that event. He rode in six days from the Afghan frontier to Asterabad on the Caspian Sea, and delivered his dispatch sooner than had been thought possible; but peace had been practically secured by telegraphic communications before his arrival in England.
Stephen's next appointment was at Sofia, and he held it when in 1886 Prince Alexander of Bulgaria was kidnapped. It is said that his presence of mind saved the prince's private papers from falling into the hands of the conspirators. In the following year Stephen was second secretary, first at Vienna and then at Paris. It is probable that had he exerted himself to that end he might have filled the highest positions in his service, but in 1893 he accepted the office of chargé d'affaires at Coburg, and in 1897 was appointed minister-resident both to Saxony and Coburg, his services being acknowledged by his creation in 1894 as KCMG, and in 1900 as KCVO. The discharge of his duties at Coburg involved close and constant personal relations with Albert Edward, prince of Wales, and various members of the British and related royal families, including dealing with the row over the duke of Edinburgh's finances in 1893 (Gladstone, Diaries, 13). In 1901, after the accession of Edward VII, Stephen retired from the diplomatic service, and became a groom-in-waiting to the king, an appointment which he held until his death.
Stephen died at his house, 124 Knightsbridge, London, after an operation for appendicitis, on 10 May 1908. He was unmarried. He wrote in French a short Comédie Vaudeville (1872), and published The Demon, a translation of a Russian poem by Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov (1875; 2nd edn, 1881), and a volume of stories adapted from Persian originals called Fairy Tales of a Parrot (1892).
Herbert Stephen, rev. H. C. G. Matthew
Sources
The Times (11 May 1908) · FO List (1908) · Gladstone, Diaries
Archives
RA :: BL, Gladstone MSS, Add. MS 44549
Likenesses
Adèle, photograph, NPG [see illus.] · Spy [L. Ward], chromolithograph caricature, NPG; repro. in VF (18 Dec 1902)
Wealth at death
£9076 4s.: resworn probate, 20 June 1908, CGPLA Eng. & Wales
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Herbert Stephen, ‘Stephen, Sir Alexander Condie (1850–1908)’, rev. H. C. G. Matthew, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2008 [http://proxy.bostonathenaeum.org:2055/view/article/36268, accessed 23 Oct 2017]
Sir Alexander Condie Stephen (1850–1908): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36268
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