Background
Finlayson was born at Thurso in 1790, was clerk to Doctor Somerville, chief of the army medical staff in Scotland, and afterwards to Doctor Farrel, chief of the army medical staff in Ceylon.
Finlayson was born at Thurso in 1790, was clerk to Doctor Somerville, chief of the army medical staff in Scotland, and afterwards to Doctor Farrel, chief of the army medical staff in Ceylon.
He was called one of the best naturalists of his day, and was noted for his pioneering studies of the plants, animals, and people of southern Thailand and the Malay peninsula. He was then transferred to Bengal, and attached to the 8th Light Dragoons as assistant-surgeon in 1819. In 1821-1822 he accompanied the Crawfurd trade mission to Siam (now Thailand) and Cochin China (now Viet Nam) as naturalist, returning with it to Calcutta in 1823.
By this time his health was thoroughly broken.
He died on the passage from Bengal to Scotland in August 1823. The journal which he had kept during the mission was edited, with a prefatory note on the author, by Sir Stamford Raffles, Fellow of the Royal Society, and published in 1826 under the title The Mission to Siam and Hue, the capital of Cochin China, in the years 1821-1822, from the Journal of the late George Finlayson, Esq.,
The bird stripe-throated bulbul (Pycnonotus finlaysoni) is named in Finlayson"s honor.