Michael Butler (diplomat)

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Sir Michael Butler GCMG (27 February 1927 – 24 December 2013) was a British diplomat and a collector of 17th century Chinese porcelain.[1]

Career

Michael Dacres Butler was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford, and joined the Foreign Service in 1950.[2] He served in New York, Baghdad, Paris and Geneva before spending a year as Fellow at the Harvard Center for International Affairs 1970–71. He was then Counsellor at Washington, D.C., 1971–72, head of the European Integration Department at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) 1972–74, assistant Under-Secretary in charge of European Community affairs 1974–76, deputy Under-Secretary 1976–79, and ambassador and permanent representative to the European Communities, Brussels, 1979–85.

Butler left the Foreign Office in 1985 and was a director of Hambros Bank 1986–94 (subsequently non-executive director 1994–97 and consultant 1997–98).[3] He was chairman of the council of the Royal College of Art 1991–96 and was a Senior Fellow.[4] He was deputy chairman of the board of trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum 1985–97.

Butler was appointed CMG in the New Year Honours of 1975,[5] knighted KCMG in the New Year Honours of 1980[6] and raised to GCMG in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1984.[7] He was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of Portugal in 1998.

Publications

  • Europe: More than a Continent, Heinemann, London, 1986. ISBN 0434099252
  • Chinese porcelain, the transitional period, 1620-1683: a selection from the Michael Butler collection (with Barbara Harrisson), Princessehof Ceramics Museum, 1986
  • Seventeenth century Jingdezhen porcelain from the Shanghai Museum and the Butler collections: beauty's enchantment (with Wang Qingzheng), Scala Publishers, 2006. ISBN 1857594177
  • Late Ming : Chinese porcelain from the Butler Collections, Musée national d'histoire et d'art, Luxembourg, 2008. ISBN 2879850290

References

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Permanent Representative to the European Communities
1979–1985
Succeeded by
Sir David Hannay