Aubrey Nigel Henry Molyneux
Herbert (1880 – 26 September
1923) was a British diplomat, traveller and
intelligence officer, associated with Albanian
independence
and twice offered the throne of that
country.
Background
Aubrey
Herbert was the second son of Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of
Carnarvon, a wealthy landowner, British cabinet minister and
Lord Lieutenant of
Ireland and his second wife, Elizabeth Howard of Greystoke
Castle
, Cumberland
, sister of Esme Howard, 1st Baron
Howard of Penrith. He was a half-brother to
George Herbert, 5th Earl
of Carnarvon, the famous
Egyptologist who discovered King
Tutankhamen's tomb. He was afflicted with eye
problems which left him nearly blind from early childhood, losing
all his sight towards the end of his life.
Herbert
was educated at Eton
College
and Balliol College,
Oxford
University
, where he
obtained a first class degree in
modern history. He was famous for climbing the roofs of the
university buildings, despite his near blindness. He numbered among
his friends
Adrian Carton De
Wiart,
Raymond Asquith,
John Buchan and
Hilaire Belloc.
Reginald Farrer remained close throughout
his life.
His friendship with
Middle Eastern
traveller and advisor Sir
Mark Sykes
dates from his entry into parliament in 1911 when, with
George Lloyd, they were the
three youngest Conservative MPs. They shared an interest in foreign
policy and worked closely together in the Arab Bureau (1916).
Herbert was also a close friend of
T.
E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia); their letters
do not feature in the standard Lawrence collections , but are
quoted by Margaret Fitzherbert in the biography of her grandfather,
The Man Who Was Greenmantle.
Languages and travels
Herbert was in his own right a considerable
Orientalist, and a linguist who spoke
French,
Italian,
German,
Turkish,
Arabic,
Greek and
Albanian as well as
English.
A renowned
traveller, especially in the Middle
East, his trips include voyages through Japan
, Yemen
, Anatolia
and Albania
.
During the
period 1902-04 he was an honorary
attache in Tokyo
, then in
Constantinople
during 1904-05. He was much more interested
in the Middle East than in the
Far
East.
Herbert often dressed as a tramp on his travels.
Albania
He became a passionate advocate of Albanian independence, having
visited the country in 1907, 1911 and 1913.
During a stay in
Tirana
(1913) he befriended Essad
Pasha. When the Albanian delegates to the 1912–13 London
Balkan Peace Conference
arrived, they secured the assistance of Herbert as an advisor. He
was very active in their cause and is regarded as having a
considerable influence on Albania's obtaining independence in the
resulting
Treaty of London .
One of his constant correspondents on Albania was
Edith Durham.
He was twice offered the
throne of
Albania. On the first occasion, just before
World War I, he was interested, but was
dissuaded by the then
prime minister,
Herbert Asquith, a family friend.
The offer remained unofficial and was rejected by the Foreign
Office. The Albanian crown went to
William of Wied.
The second occasion the crown was offered was after the defeat of
the Italian Army by the Albanians in September 1920. Again the
offer was unofficial, though it was made on behalf of the Albanian
government. Herbert discussed the offer with
Philip Kerr and
Maurice Hankey,
pursuing the idea of perhaps acting under the banner of the
League of Nations;
Eric Drummond, a friend of
Herbert, had become its first Secretary General, and lobbying by
Herbert led to the acceptance of Albania as a member in the League
of Nations in December 1920. With a change of Foreign Minister in
the Albanian government Aubrey's chance of a crown greatly
diminished. The crown was then (April 1921), still more
unofficially, offered to the
Duke of Atholl by
Jim Barnes of the British Friends of Albania residing in
Italy.
The
National Library of
Albania in Tirana
was once
named after Herbert, as was a village in the country.
Parliament
He was a very independent
Conservative Member of Parliament
(MP) for the
Southern division of
Somerset from 1911 to 1918, and for
Yeovil from 1918 to his
death.
Always an advocate of the rights of smaller
nations, Herbert opposed the British Government's Irish
policy. Herbert was, however, always seen as
something of a lightweight in the House of
Commons
.
World War One
1914-15
Despite very poor eyesight, Herbert was able, at the outbreak of
World War I in 1914, to join the
Irish Guards, in which he served in a
supernumerary position. He did this by purchasing a uniform and
boarding a troopship bound for France.
During the Battle of
Mons
he was wounded, taken prisoner, and escaped.
After a convalescence in England and unable to rejoin due to his
ocular disability, Aubrey was proposed for service in
military intelligence in Egypt by
Kitchener's
military secretary
Oswald
FitzGerald via
Mark Sykes (see
Baghdad Railway). Herbert was
attached to the Intelligence Bureau in Caïro under Colonel Clayton
in January 1915. In mid-February he was sent on an intelligence
gathering mission in the Eastern Mediterranean aboard the cruiser
Bacchante. When the
Gallipoli Campaign started,
General
Alexander Godley, formerly
of the Irish Guards and second in command to
General Birdwood of the
Australian and New
Zealand Army Corps, now commanding the New Zealanders, offered
him an appointment as
liaison
officer and interpreter on the General's staff. His pre-war
contacts (a.o.
Rıza Tevfik
Bölükbaşı) and ability to speak
Turkish were to prove useful. He became
famous for arranging a truce of eight hours, on
Whit Monday, 24 May, with the Turkish commander
Mustafa Kemal, for the purpose of
burying the dead. (This episode appears, with him as "the
Honourable Herbert", in
Louis de
Bernieres's novel
Birds Without Wings .)
In Eastern Mediterranean Intelligence he worked together with
Compton Mackenzie.
In October 1915, on sick leave in England, Herbert carried with him
a memorandum from the Arab Bureau from Colonel Clayton to the
Foreign Office explaining the situation in the Middle East. In
November, the memorandum, at first favourably received, became
obsolete after the visit of
François Georges-Picot and his
subsequent negotiations with
Mark Sykes.
It would appear that the Arab Bureau, however, continued working
along the lines of the memorandum which led to contrary promises
resulting in accusations of bad faith.
In November 1915 Herbert was in Paris and Rome on a secret mission
related to Albania.
Following the plan to evacuate Anzac Cove
beginning the following month, he volunteered to
return to Anzac to stay with the rear guard, convinced that his
knowledge of language and his network of acquaintances would
greatly benefit that body if captured. The successful
evacuation of Anzac and
Suvla
Bay on the 20th December and the good prospects for
Cape Helles countered his proposal.
1916
Impatient with the indecision of the Foreign Office over Albania,
Herbert at the start of 1916 went prospecting for new
opportunities. Admiral Sir
Rosslyn
Wemyss proposed for him a job as Captain in Intelligence. When
in February the War Office cleared him from involvement in Albania,
he took up the offer and found himself in charge of
Naval intelligence in
Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and the Gulf.
Following the critical situation of British troops at
Kut-al-Amara, the War Office was instructed to
offer Herbert's services to
General Townshend to
negotiate terms with the Turks.
T.
E. Lawrence was sent on behalf of the Arab
Bureau while Colonel Beach acted for Intelligence of the
Indian Expeditionary Force.
Together they were to oversee the exchange of prisoners and
wounded, and eventually to offer the commander
Khalil Pasha up to ₤ 2 million for the relief
of Kut. The offer was rejected by
Enver
Pasha, and the evacuation of the wounded severely hampered
through lack of transport.
The situation at Kut led Aubrey to send a telegram to
Austen Chamberlain,
Secretary of State for India,
with support of General Lake but still in breach of army
regulations, condemning the incompetence in handling the
Mesopotamian campaign. The
Government of India ordered a
court martial but the War Office refused.
Admiral Wemyss, who travelled to
Simla for the
purpose, supported him throughout.
Back in England in July 1916, Aubrey Herbert started asking in the
House of Commons for a
Royal
Commission to inquire into the conduct of the Mesopotamian
campaign. He opposed the routine evasiveness of the Prime Minister,
Asquith (a close friend), by speaking in the
House four times on Mesopotamia, and his critics saw in his
obstinacy a personal vendetta against Sir
Beauchamp Duff, the Commander-in-Chief in
India, and Sir William Meyer, the Financial Secretary., but his
persistence paid off, and a
Special
Commission Mesopotamia was subsequently appointed.
In October 1916 Aubrey Herbert started his post as a liaison
officer with the Italian army, whose frontline lay in Albania. It
seems that he was unaware of the clause partitioning Albania signed
with Italy in the secret
Treaty of
London on 26 April 1915. When the
Bolsheviks published its secret provisions in
1917, he rejected the idea of Albania as merely a small Muslim
state, the fiefdom he believed of
Essad
Pasha. In December he was back in England.
In December 1916 also he learned about the death of his cousin
Bron, the son of
his (pacifist) uncle
Auberon
Herbert, to whom he had felt closest. From that date Aubrey was
to consistently support the idea of negotiated peace.
1917-1918
1917 saw him working, under General MacDonogh, the Director of
Military Intelligence, on plans of a separate peace with Turkey. On
16 July he conducted a series of meetings with Turks in Geneva,
Interlaken and Bern, among them a (secret) representative of an
influential anti-Enver group. Let us note that
Mustafa Kemal, who Aubrey knew from Gallipoli,
had fallen out with
Enver Pasha over the
way -by personal order of the Sultan- his command over the Seventh
Army opposite
Allenby in Syria had
been bestowed on him on the 5th of July (he had been a Staff
Captain with the Fifth Army in Damascus in 1905). Aubrey took his
notes to the Inter-Allied Conference in Paris. In a memorandum for
the Foreign Office he said "If we get the luggage it does not
matter very much if the Turks get the labels. When Lord Kitchener
was all powerful in Egypt his secretary was wearing a fez.
Mesopotamia and Palestine are worth a fez."
In November 1917 Aubrey Herbert was again sent to Italy under
orders of General Macdonogh. Now he was in charge of the British
Adriatic Mission, with
Samuel Hoare
coordinating the Mission's special intelligence in Rome. An earlier
proposal by expatriate Albanians in America, "Vatra", of raising an
Albanian regiment under Aubrey's command had been renewed. The
matter lay somewhat delicate with the Italians as "Vatra" became
increasingly anti-Italian. On 17 July 1918 the proposal was
formally approved in Boston, and the Italian Consulate accepted
provided it became a unit in the Italian Army. The end of the war
prevented the issue of growing into a tangle.
Herbert
ended the war as head of the British mission to the Italian
army in Albania with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
Aftermath
Unclear policy led to nationalist criticism from Imperial bases
such as Egypt (see
Saad Zaghlul, 1919)
at the
Paris Peace
Conference, 1919, nor was the resulting political handling
cause for much optimism to privileged witnesses such as Aubrey, T.
E. Lawrence or Gertrude Bell.
At the
Conference there was a glimpse of further prospect for Aubrey
Herbert when the Italian delegates proposed to assume shared
responsibility over the Caucasus, an area
of vital strategic importance - the Baku
oilfields,
access from the north to Mosul
and Kirkuk
. By
May 1919, the proposal appeared to be quite empty.
By May 1919 also, the Directorate of Intelligence had changed
hands, on the authority of
Lord Curzon
(acting Foreign Secretary while
Arthur
Balfour was negotiating in Paris) from Aubrey's chief General
MacDonogh to Sir
Basil Thomson of
Scotland Yard Special Branch i.e from military to civilian in view
of the
Bolshevik threat on the home front.
Thus it was possible for Aubrey in February 1921 to amaze a friend
he could confide to,
Lord Robert
Cecil, that he was going abroad as an inspector of Scotland
Yard: he went to Berlin to interview
Talaat
Pasha for intelligence.
Family life and premature death
Aubrey
Herbert married Mary, daughter of the 4th Viscount de Vesci, a member of the
Protestant Ascendancy in
Ireland
. Lord de Vesci and his wife had converted to
Roman Catholicism and raised their
children accordingly. Herbert's mother-in-law gave the family a
fine house in London.
Herbert's mother gave him both a country
estate at Pixton
Park
in Somerset
with 5,000 acres (20 km²) of land and a
substantial villa on the Gulf of Genoa
at Portofino
.
Aubrey and Mary Herbert had four children.
Laura married the
novelist Evelyn Waugh, who featured the
Italian villa in his war trilogy Sword of Honour, though he moved it to
an imaginary location on the Bay of Naples
in the vicinity of Sorrento
.
Herbert was a slim man of more than average height and
contemporaries described him as having perfect manners. Towards the
end of his life, he became totally blind. He was given very bad
advice to the effect that having all his teeth extracted would
restore his sight. The dental operation resulted in blood poisoning
from which he died in London on 26 September 1923. Herbert's estate
was probated in 1924 at 49,970 pounds sterling.
His son Auberon inherited the
Pixton Park and Portofino properties.
Model for literature
It is widely believed that Herbert is the inspiration for the
character
Sandy Arbuthnot,
a hero in several
John Buchan novels.
The series starts with
The
Thirty-Nine Steps, but Arbuthnot's first appearance is in
Greenmantle, hence the title of
his granddaughter's biography of him,
The Man Who Was
Greenmantle. Herbert's Italian family villa is the model for
that in the
Sword of Honour
trilogy by his son-in-law
Evelyn
Waugh.
The
cameo character of the
'Honourable Herbert' in
Louis de
Bernieres's novel
Birds Without Wings is
clearly based on Herbert. He appears as a British
liaison officer with the
ANZAC troops serving in the
Galipoli campaign. A
polyglot officer able to communicate with both
sides, he arranges the burial of the dead of both sides, achieving
great popularity with both sides - a description that mirrors his
role in the 1915 truce.
References
- David Garnett, Malcolm Brown
- Margaret FitzHerbert 1985, The man who was Greenmantle
chapter 14, 'The dear journey's end'
- S. J. Hetherington Katharine Atholl (1874-1960) Against the
Tide pg 88-90, Aberdeen University Press 1989 ISBN
0080365922
- Lord Kinross Atatürk - The Rebirth of a Nation K.
Rustem & Brother, Nicosia 1984
- Birds Without Wings by
Louis
de Bernieres, pp 366-368
- Margaret FitzHerbert The man who was Greenmantle - a
biography of Aubrey Herbert Oxford University Press 1985 ISBN
0192818562 chapter 9, Anzac 1915
- A letter on the memorandum from November 3rd, 1915 from Herbert
to Clayton containing:" They (FO) trust Egypt with the running of
the Arabian Question..." is extensively quoted (pg 171) in H. V. F.
Winstone's Gertrude Bell Jonathan Cape, 1978 ISBN
0224014323
- Compare: Lord Hardinge's letter on the memorandum to Wingate of
November 28th, 1915 in : Winstone 1978, Gertrude Bell pg
171-172
- Margaret FitzHerbert, 1985 The man who was Greenmantle
chapter 10, Kut 1916
- A letter from George Lloyd to Wingate of May 27, 1915 reads :"...the Government of India seem to be
doubly cursed with a Commander in Chief with too little grip and a
Finance Member called Mayer with too much..." in: Winstone 1978,
Gertrude Bell pg 177. Aubrey Herbert's interventions in
the House of Commons date 12th, 17th, 18th, 20th, 26th Juli ref:
FitzHerbert 1985
- Margaret FitzHerbert 1985 The man who was Greenmantle
, chapter 11 Balkan soldiering and Swiss Peacemaking
- FitzHerbert 1985, Chapter 11
- Lord Kinross Atatürk - The Rebirth of a Nation Rustem
& Brother Nicosia 1984, Chapter Fourteen
- Mem. 26 July
1917. F.O. 371/3057 No. 148986
see: Notes Page 193 in: Margaret Fitzherbert, 1985 The
man who was Greenmantle
- Margaret FitzHerbert 1985, The man who was Greenmantle
chapter 12 Rebellious MP
- J.A.Cross Sir Samuel Hoare - A Political Biography
Jonathan Cape 1977 ISBN 0224013505
- FitzHerbert, 1985 chapter 12
- Keith Jeffery The British army and the crisis of empire
1918-22 Manchester University Press - Studies in Military
History, 1984 ISBN 0719017173
- Keith Jeffery, 1984, Chapter 8, Persia and Mesopotamia, pg
136
- Peter Hopkirk On Secret Service East of Constantinople
Oxford University Press 1995 ISBN 0192853031
- Christopher Andrew Secret Service - The Making of the
British Intelligence Community Sceptre, 1986 ISBN 0340404302
pg 336
- Margaret Fitzherbert, 1985 chapter 14, 'The dear yourney's
end'
- Birds Without Wings, approx
pp 366-68
Bibliography
- Mons, Anzac & Kut by Aubrey Herbert
- "The man who was Greenmantle: A biography of Aubrey Herbert" by
Margaret Fitzherbert (John Murray, London, 1983)
- "Moments of Memory - Recollections and Impressions" by Herbert Asquith, Hutchinson & Co, London
1937
- "The Decline and Fall Of the British Aristocracy" by David Cannadine, Picador, London, 1992
- "The Asquiths" by Colin Clifford, John Murray, London,
2003
- "Hilaire Belloc" by A. N. Wilson, Penguin,
Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England, 1986
- "Desert Queen" by Janet Wallach, Anchor Books, New York,
1999
- "John Buchan, A Biography" by Janet Adam Smith, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, 1985
- "Evelyn Waugh, Vol. 1, The Early Years 1903-1939" by Martin
Stannard, Flamingo, Hammersmith, London, 1993
- "Evelyn Waugh, A Biography" by Christopher Sykes, Penguin, Harmondsworth,
Middlesex, England, 1977
- "John Buchan, The Presbyterian Cavalier" by Andrew Lownie,
McArthur and Company, Toronto, 2004
- Dictionary of
National Biography.
See also
Historical
people portrayed as heroes