Marcel Aurousseau


Marcel Aurousseau BSc MC C. de G. was an Australian geographer, geologist, war hero, historian and translator.
Aurousseau, who was of French and Irish descent, attended Sydney Boys High School alongside three students who were also later prominent in various fields: Arthur Wheen, Raymond Kershaw and Arthur McLaughlin.
He began his scientific career as an "office boy" at the Australian Museum in Sydney. While completing the Bachelor of Science course at the University of Sydney, Aurousseau won the University Medal in Geology.
In 1913, he was appointed to the position of assistant lecturer at the newly formed geology department of the University of Western Australia, in Perth.

Army service

Following the outbreak of World War I, Aurousseau obtained leave from UWA, to join the Australian Imperial Force. He was assigned initially to the 28th Battalion, before joining the 51st Battalion on the Western Front.
Aurousseau first saw action in France at the battles of Fleurbaix, the Pozières and the Mouquet Farm, which resulted in him being severely wounded. He was subsequently awarded the Military Cross.
Promoted to Captain, Aurousseau also served at the Battle of Messines, the Third Battle of Ypres, the First Battle of Dernancourt, and was wounded again at Hourges, during the Battle of Amiens, in August 1918.
As a result of his war service, Aurousseau was also awarded the French Croix de Guerre.

Scientific and literary career

Returning to Perth the war, Aurousseau again taught geology at UWA.
He subsequently moved to the United States, to work at the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution, in Washington DC.
During 1923–24, Aurousseau worked for the American Geographical Society in New York.
After returning briefly to Australia, Aurousseau moved to London to pursue a literary career.
Between 1936 and 1955 he worked as executive secretary of the British Government Permanent Committee on Geographical Names. During World War II, Aurousseau contributed to military geographical dictionaries used by Allied forces. In 1956 he declined the award of an MBE.
In his most influential work, The Rendering of Geographical Names, Aurousseau coined the term exonym: a place name that is the common name only in countries or regions outside the place in question, usually for historical reasons. Usage of "exonym" has grown to include non-geographical proper names for things such as languages, cultures or populations. Some significant examples of exonyms therefore include: the English language "China" for Zhōngguó; the Spanish word estadounidenses for "Americans", and; the English "German" for Deutsch.
In 1969, the Royal Geographical Society presented Aurousseau with the Victoria Medal, an annual award "for conspicuous merit in research in geography".

Authored works

Aurousseau's published works include:
; Travel books:
; Geography/history
;Sound recording