Sir George Macartney (; 19 January 1867 –19 May 1945) was the British consul-general in Kashgar at the end of the 19th century. He was succeeded by Percy T. Etherton. Macartney arrived in Xinjiang in 1890 as an interpreter for the Younghusband expedition. He remained there until 1918. Macartney first proposed the Macartney-MacDonald Line as the boundary between China and India in Aksai Chin.
Macartney was born in Nanjing and was half-Chinese while his godfather was Chinese politician Li Hongzhang. His father, Halliday Macartney, was a member of the same family as George Macartney, the 18th century British ambassador to China, and his mother was a near relative of Lar Wang, one of the leaders of the Taiping rebellion.
Macartney married Catherine Borland in 1898. In Kashgar his wife, Catherine, Lady Macartney, assisted the archaeologists who found the library at Dunhuang. The Macartneys had three children.
The Macartneys retired to Jersey in the Channel Islands, where they were trapped by the German occupation during World War II. Macartney died on Jersey, just a few days after the German surrender.
âÂÂEarthquakes in KashgarâÂÂ, in: The Geographical Journal, vol. 20, No. 4 (Oct. 1902), pp. 463-464
âÂÂNotices, from Chinese Sources, on the Ancient Kingdom of Lau-lan, or Shen-shenâÂÂ, in: The Geographical Journal, vol. 21, no. 3, March 1903, pp. 260-265
âÂÂEastern Turkestan: The Chinese as Rulers over an Alien RaceâÂÂ, in: Proceedings of the Central Asian Society, London, 1909
âÂÂChinese Turkistan: Past and PresentâÂÂ, in: Notices of the Proceedings at the Meetings of the Members of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, vol. 22, 1917-1919, 534-536 [Lecture of Friday, May 9, 1919]
âÂÂBolshevism as I saw it at Tashkent in 1918âÂÂ, in: Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, vol. 7, Nos. 2-3, 1920, p. 42-58
âÂÂSin-Kiang. Mongols and Moslems of Chinese TurkistanâÂÂ, in: Peoples of all Nations: Their Life Today and Story of Their Past, ed. Sir John Alexander Hammerton, vol. 6, 1922, 4649-4672
âÂÂWhere Three Empires MeetâÂÂ, in: Countries of the World described by the Leading Travel Writers of the Day. Vol. 6. Siberia to Zanzibar, ed. John Alexander Hammerton, London 1926, S. 4025âÂÂ4045