'' by
Thomas Lawrence, 1810. Ouseley commissioned the work while the Persian envoy was in London On his return to England in 1805, Ouseley was not made a peer as he had expected (and despite a recommendation). He brought his two sons with him back to England, and married Georgina Whitelocke. They had a further six children, none of whom married. The only one of his children to marry was his first son born in India, William Claude Ouseley, who had since immigrated to Nova Scotia with the 96th Nova Scotia Fencibles and married Rosina Weeks. William stayed in Canada where his descendants remain. Gore Ouseley's other son born in India, Ralph, became a Doctor and returned to India, subsequently dying there in 1823. See: John Mitchiner (2009) THE OUSELEYS – A FAMILY INVOLVEMENT WITH INDIA, Asian Affairs, 40:1, 1–14, DOI: 10.1080/03068370802658633 Ouseley taught himself
Sanskrit,
Arabic and
Persian, and for enjoyment, he and his brother William advanced the study of Persia. William published a number of books, In 1835, he served as the
High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire. He became President of the Society for the Publication of the Oriental Texts in 1842 and is credited with the society's publication of ''Gulistan of Sa'di'' by
Sa'di, which had a translation by Francis Gladwin. There is a monument to his memory in
Hertingfordbury Church,
Hertfordshire by
Thomas Denman. His collection of Mughal paintings is at the
Bodleian Library in Oxford (they were donated in 1859 by a Bengal civil servant, Mr. J. B. Elliott). His son, The Reverend Canon Professor Sir
Frederick Arthur Gore Ouseley (12 August 1825 – 6 April 1889) was an English composer, organist, and musicologist. ==Books==