The society was founded in London in 1823, with the first general meeting being held on 15 March at the Thatched House on
St James's Street, London, chaired by
Henry Thomas Colebrooke. This meeting elected the officers (including
Charles Williams-Wynn as the first president) and council, defined that the name of the society was the Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, and that members should be designated Members of the Asiatic Society (MAS). It also empowered the council to frame regulations (these were approved at the next general meeting on 19 April), to look for a suitable site for the society's meetings, and to seek a charter of incorporation. Later that year, at a general meeting held on 7 June, Williams-Wynn announced that
King George IV, who had already agreed to be patron of the society, had granted the title of "Royal" to the society, giving it the name of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland and its members the designation Members of the Royal Asiatic Society (MRAS). The society received its charter under that name on 11 August 1824. The Royal Asiatic Society was established by a group primarily composed of notable scholars and colonial administrators. It was intended to be the British counterpart to the
Asiatic Society of Calcutta, which had been founded in 1784 by the noted
Sanskrit scholar and jurist
Sir William Jones. A leading figure in the foundation of the Royal Asiatic Society was
Henry Thomas Colebrooke, who was himself an important Sanskrit scholar, and one time President of the Asiatic Society of Calcutta. Another was
Sir George Staunton, 2nd Baronet, a Chinese-speaking diplomat who had worked in China. Due to the nature of the society's close connection with the
British Empire in the east, much of the work originating with the society has been focused on topics concerning the
Indian subcontinent. However, the purview of the Society extends far beyond India: all of
Asia and into
Islamic
North Africa, and
Ethiopia are included. The Society does have a few limitations on its field on interest, such as recent political history and current affairs. This particular moratorium led to the founding of the Central Asian Society, which later became the
Royal Society for Asian Affairs. After
World War II, with the gradual end of British political hegemony 'east of
Suez', the Society has maintained a politically neutral, academic focus on Asia. Lectures are regularly held at the offices of the Society. There is no charge for regular lectures. Many past lectures are available to listen to or watch online. ==Members and fellows==