Background
Hornby was born in 1825, in Yorkshire, to Thomas and Francesca Hornby. His mother was from the Grimani family of Venice.
Hornby was born in 1825, in Yorkshire, to Thomas and Francesca Hornby. His mother was from the Grimani family of Venice.
He was called to the bar of Middle Temple in 1848 and practiced briefly in London. In 1853, he was appointed a commissioner of Mixed British and American Commission settling outstanding individual claims between Britain and the United States of America. Following this, he was appointed as a commissioner of the Turkish Loan lent by Britain to Turkey during the Crimean War with Russia. Judicial While in Turkey, Hornby sat as a consular assessor in the British consular courts.
Hornby was asked by the Foreign Office to write a report on the exercise of extraterritorial judicial powers in Turkey by consuls who had no legal training or background.
Hornby recommended setting up a court with dedicated staff to handle judicial work. This was accepted and on 27 August 1857, at the age of 32, Hornby was appointed Judge of the British Supreme Consular Court at Constantinople.
He was knighted five years later in 1862 at the early age of 37. In 1865, Hornby was appointed Chief Judge of the newly established British Supreme Court for China and Japan in Shanghai.
Charles Wycliffe Goodwin was appointed Assistant Judge.
The court had jurisdiction over British subjects in China and Japan. Hornby served as Chief Judge for 11 years before retiring, at the age of 51 in 1876. He was succeeded by George French, the former Chief Justice of Sierra Leone.
After retirement, Hornby moved to Devon.
He maintained an interest in international law and helped to work out a scheme that led to the establishment of the Hague Tribunal. He also wrote a pamphlet for the Peace Preservation Society, advocating the establishment in Switzerland of a school or faculty of international law to be kept up jointly by the Powers.
Sir Edmund died in his sleep in 1896 after a long mountain climb in Rapallo, Italy, at the age of 71. He was buried in Rapallo.
Sir Edmund Hornby, An Autobiography Clark, Douglas (2015).
Gunboat Justice: British and American Law Courts in China and Japan (1842-1943). Hong Kong: Earnshaw Books., Volume 1:; Volume 2:.