General Sir Horace George Montagu
Rumbold
Male
England
1869-02-05
St. Petersburg, Russia
1941-05-14
Westminster, London, England


About

From Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Horace_Rumbold,_9th_Baronet

Sir Horace George Montagu Rumbold, was a British diplomat. A well-travelled man who learned Arabic, Japanese and German, learned Arabic, Japanese and German, he is largely remembered for his role as British Ambassador to Berlin from 1928 to 1933 in which he warned of the ambitions of Hitler and Nazi Germany. Horace Rumbold was born on 5 February 1869 at St. Petersburg in the Russian Empire, the son of Sir Horace Rumbold, 8th Baronet and Caroline Barney (née Harrington). Horace was educated at Aldin House Prep School and at Eton.

Rumbold was an honorary attaché at The Hague (1889-1890), where his father was ambassador. In 1891, he passed the first of the required examinations and entered the Diplomatic Service. After a year at the Foreign Office in London, he served in Cairo, Tehran, Vienna, Madrid and Munich between 1900 and 1913. He was then moved to Tokyo (1909-1913) and to Berlin (1913-1914).

In Berlin, he took up the position of counsellor. Rumbold was in charge of the British Embassy when the ambassador, Sir Edward Goschen, went home on leave on 1 July. Rumbold conducted negotiations in the first four of the ten days that preceded the outbreak of the First World War. Rumbold left Berlin with the ambassador on 5 August 1914, with crowds attacking the embassy and their train.

In 1916, he was appointed ambassador to Berne. After the war, he was appointed ambassador to Poland in 1919. The following year, he became the High Commissioner to Constantinople during which he signed the Lausanne Treaty on behalf of the British Empire. He then became ambassador to Madrid from 1924 to 1928.

Rumbold was appointed to his last position as ambassador to Berlin in 1928. He supported appeasing Heinrich Brüning’s government in the hope of staving off German nationalist parties such as Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party. Once Hitler came to power in 1933, Rumbold was deeply unsettled by the Nazi regime and produced a succession of despatches critical of the Nazis. On 26 April 1933 Rumbold sent to the Foreign Office his valedictory despatch in which he gave an unvarnished view of Hitler, the Nazis and their ambitions: “[Hitler] starts with the assumption that man is a fighting animal; therefore the nation is a fighting unit, being a community of fighters. A country or race which ceases to fight is doomed. Pacifism is the deadliest sin. Intelligence is of secondary importance. Will and determination are of the higher worth. Only brute force can ensure survival of the race. The new Reich must gather within its fold all the scattered German elements in Europe.

“What Germany needs is an increase in territory. [To Hitler] the idea that there is something reprehensible in chauvinism is entirely mistaken. The climax of education is military service [for youths] educated to the maximum of aggressiveness. It is the duty of the government to implant in the people the feeling of manly courage and passionate hatred. Intellectualism is undesirable. It is objectionable to preach international understanding. [He] has spoken with derision of such delusive documents as peace-pacts and such delusive ideas as the spirit of Locarno.”

Rumbold concluded by giving stark warnings for the future of international relations:

“It would be misleading to base any hopes on a return to sanity. The German government is encouraging an attitude of mind which can only end in one way. I have the impression that the persons directing the policy of the Hitler government are not normal.”

Sir John Simon, the Foreign Secretary, found Rumbold’s descriptions to be “definitely disquieting”. Ralph Wigram, an official in the Foreign Office, gave Winston Churchill a copy of this despatch in the middle of March 1936. After Rumbold’s death, Lord Vansittart said of him that “little escaped him, and his warnings [about Nazi Germany] were clearer than anything that we got later.” Walter Laqueur concurred by claiming that Rumbold’s “prophetic” insights explained the Third Reich better than the expert opinions that were later issued from the OSS.



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Archive statistics 1890 - 1900
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Tournaments Wien (Vienna) - 1900 Den Haag - 1894 Wijk aan Zee - 1891 Den Haag - 1890

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