Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen, CBE, DSO (3 March 1878 – 17 June 1967)[1] was a British soldier, intelligence officer, and ornithologist. He had a decorated military career spanning Africa and the Middle East. He was credited with creating and executing the Haversack Ruse in October 1917, during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War, but his participation in this matter has since been refuted.
Richard Meinertzhagen | |
---|---|
Born | Richard Meinertzhagen 3 March 1878 London, England |
Died | 17 June 1967 Swordale, Ross-shire, Scotland | (aged 89)
Scientific career | |
Fields | Zoology Parasitology |
While early biographies lionized Meinertzhagen as a master of military strategy and espionage, later works such as The Meinertzhagen Mystery present him as a fraud for fabricating stories of his feats and speculated he murdered his wife, in addition to mass extrajudicial killings while in the colonial service. The discovery of stolen museum bird specimens resubmitted as original discoveries has raised serious doubts on the veracity of many of his ornithological records.
Background and youth
editMeinertzhagen was born into a wealthy, socially connected British family. His father, Daniel Meinertzhagen, was head of the Frederick Huth & Co. merchant-banking dynasty, which had an international reputation, that one biographer claimed in the introduction to his book was second in importance only to the Rothschilds.[2] His mother was Georgina Potter, sister of Beatrice Webb, a co-founder of the London School of Economics. Meinertzhagen's surname derives from Meinerzhagen in Germany, the home of an ancestor.[3] On his mother's side (the wealthy Potter family), he was of English descent. Among his relations were "many of Britain's titled, rich, and influential personages." Although he had his doubts, he also claimed to be a distant descendant of Philip III of Spain.[4] His nephew, Daniel Meinertzhagen (1915–1991), was a chairman of Lazard. His niece, Teresa Georgina Mayor (1915–1996), married the 3rd Baron Rothschild.
Young Richard was sent as a boarding student to Aysgarth School in the north of England, then was enrolled at Fonthill in Sussex, and finally at Harrow School, where his stay overlapped with that of Winston Churchill.[5] In 1895, at the age of 18, he reluctantly obeyed his father's wishes to join the family bank as a clerk. He was assigned to offices in Cologne and Bremen. There, he picked up the German language, but remained uninterested in banking. After he returned to the bank's home office in England in 1897, he received his father's approval to join the Hampshire Yeomanry.[6] In 1911, he married Armorel, the daughter of Colonel Herman Le Roy-Lewis, who commanded the Hampshire Yeomanry.[1][7][8]
Meinertzhagen's passion for bird-watching began as a child. His brother Daniel and he were encouraged by a family friend, the philosopher Herbert Spencer, who, like another family friend, Charles Darwin, was an ardent empiricist. Spencer would take young Richard and Daniel on walks around the family home of Mottisfont Abbey, urging them to observe and enquire on the habits of birds. Around 1887, they kept a pet sparrowhawk, which was taken to Hyde Park to let it prey on sparrows. The first serious ornithologist whom Richard met was Brian Hodgson. Daniel took an interest in bird illustration, which brought them in contact with Archibald Thorburn and led to an introduction to Joseph Wolf and G.E. Lodge. They had first met Richard Bowdler Sharpe at the Natural History Museum in 1886 and noted that he was very fond of encouraging children, showing them around the bird collections.[9]
Military career
editLacking the desire to make a career in merchant banking, Meinertzhagen took examinations for a commission in the British Army, and after training at Aldershot, was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Fusiliers on 18 January 1899. He was sent to India to join a battalion of his regiment.[10] Other than routine regimental soldiering, he participated in big-game hunting, was promoted, sent on sick leave to England, and after recovery posted to the relocated battalion at Mandalay in Burma. He was promoted lieutenant on 8 February 1900. He then started his "zealous campaign" for a transfer to Africa, and in April 1902, was seconded for service with the Foreign Office,[11] which attached him to the 3rd (East African) Battalion of the King's African Rifles. The following month, he finally arrived at Mombasa in British East Africa.[12]
Kenya and South Africa
editMeinertzhagen was assigned as a staff officer with the King's African Rifles (KAR). Again, he participated in big-game hunting, but "regarded himself as scientist-explorer first, and only incidentally as a soldier." His maps, landscapes, and wildlife drawings proved him an artist of exceptional talent. In 1903, he was delegated to conduct a wild animal census in the Serengeti and Athi plains.[13]
In 1902 and 1903 when Meinertzhagen travelled through Northern Gikuyuland, it is believed on British imperial missions, he is credited to have given the name Nyeri to the place where modern day Nyeri Town stands today. The name is from the local name of nearby Nyeri Hill. He later on, after establishing relations with local chiefs, got into an altercation because of the government taxes he imposed, and harassment. Meinertzhagen ordered his soldiers to burn Gikuyu villages in the night, without warning. This resulted in the death of more than a hundred people.[citation needed]
During Meinertzhagen's assignment to Africa, frequent native "risings and rebellions" occurred. By 1903 KAR's retaliatory ventures focused on confiscation of livestock, a highly effective form of punishment, and "the KAR had become accomplished cattle-rustlers." In 1904, one such punitive expedition was commanded by a Captain Francis Arthur Dickinson of the 3rd KAR with participation by Meinertzhagen, where more than 11,000 cattle were captured at the cost of 3 men killed and 33 wounded.[14] The body count on the African side was estimated at 1,500 from the Kikuyu and Embu tribes.[15]
In the Kenya Highlands in 1905, Meinertzhagen ended the anti-colonial Nandi Resistance, by killing its leader, the Nandi Orkoiyot (spiritual leader) Koitalel Arap Samoei. He arranged a meeting to negotiate by Koitalel's home on 19 October 1905, at which he planned to kill him. Meinertzhagen shot Koitalel at point-blank range while shaking his hand and his men killed Koitatlel's accompanying entourage, including most of his advisors. It is claimed that he also decapitated Koitalel and sent some of Koitalel's body parts to England. Initially, he had been able to orchestrate a cover-up and was commended for the incident.[16][17][18] However, after news of what had actually happened became known, Meinertzhagen claimed self-defense and eventually, after a third court of inquiry, he was cleared by the presiding officer, Brig. William Manning.[19] Meinertzhagen collected tribal artefacts after this revolt. Some of these items, including a walking stick and baton belonging to Koitalel, were returned to Kenya in 2006.[20] Pressure from the Colonial Department on the War Office eventually brought about Meinertzhagen's removal from Africa, as "he had become a negative symbol" and on 28 May 1906 "he found himself on a ship being trundled back to England in disgrace and in disgust."[21] Meinertzhagen spent 1902 to 1906 in East Africa with a pay of £400 but returned from Africa with £4000, the rest being earnings from hunting, largely from the sale of ivory.[22]
Captain Meinertzhagen then spent the latter part of 1906 at "dreary administrative War Office desk jobs pushing papers." However, "... by making full use of his wide network of contacts in high places" he was able to rehabilitate himself and was assigned to the Fusiliers' Third Battalion in South Africa, arriving at Cape Town on 3 February 1907.[4] He served there in 1908 and 1909, then on Mauritius. By 1913, he was again in India.
At the beginning of the First World War, he was posted to the intelligence staff of the British Indian Expeditionary Force. His map-making skills were much valued and recognized, though his assessments of the strength of the German Schutztruppe and other contributions to the conduct of the Battle of Tanga and the Battle of Kilimanjaro were a complete miss.[23] From January 1915 through August 1916, Meinertzhagen served as chief of British military intelligence for the East Africa theatre at Nairobi. His diary record of this campaign contain harsh assessments of senior officers, of the role played by the Royal Navy, and of the quality of the Indian units sent to East Africa.[24] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in February 1916.[25] In November of that year General J.C. Smuts ordered him invalided to England.[26]
Palestine campaign
editThis section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards. (May 2018) |
During 1917, Meinertzhagen was transferred from East Africa to be put in place at Deir el-Belah. He made contact with Nili, a Jewish spy network headed by the agronomist Aaron Aaronsohn. Meinertzhagen later asserted that he respected Aaronsohn more than anyone else he ever met. They were instrumental in contacting Jewish officers in the Ottoman army, amongst many other sources, for information, and attempted their defection to the allies. A German Jewish doctor stationed at el-Afulah railway junction gave valuable reconnaissance reports on troop movements south. Meinertzhagen's department produced regular maps from the data showing the dispositions of enemy forces in the desert.[27] In October 1917, the Turks broke up the network by intercepting a carrier pigeon and subjecting the Jews to hideous torture. Sarah Aaronsohn, (Aaron's sister), age 27, a key figure, committed suicide in her home after torture. Meinertzhagen's sources of information dwindled to the occasional prisoner caught out by patrols and deserters.
The 'Haversack Ruse'
editHe is frequently credited with a surprise attack known as the Haversack Ruse in October 1917; during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War, according to his diary, he let a haversack containing false British battle plans fall into Ottoman military hands, thereby bringing about the British victory in the Battle of Beersheba and Gaza.[28]
The documents were taken to Kress von Kressenstein, who examined them and doubted their authenticity. According to an account by Turkish Colonel Hussein Husni, Chief of Staff of 7th Army, Meinertzhagen's German-sounding name caused confusion in the German and Turkish staff as to why a British officer would have a German name and added to the suspicion of the inauthenticity of the documents.[29] Von Kressenstein later wrote that he did not believe the documents were real:
The English knew they could not begin a large campaign after the beginning of the rainy season... there could be no doubt that the attack on Beersheba and Gaza was to begin very soon. Therefore I was sure the information of the satchel must be dismissed as fake.
— von Kressenstein
No changes in German-Turkish positions took place in the weeks leading up to the British operations at Beersheba or Gaza, indicating that the ruse had no effect on the decision-making of the Turkish-German leadership. To the fault of von Kressenstein, no significant reinforcements were sent to Beersheba even though the deception was uncovered.[30]
Although Meinertzhagen's participation in this ruse has been refuted (he neither planned nor executed it), his stories of the ruse themselves would have a major impact on events in the Second World War. Research conducted by Brian Garfield, author of The Meinertzhagen Mystery, has proven that the idea was actually that of Lieutenant Colonel J.D. Belgrave, a member of Allenby's general staff, and the rider who dropped the satchel was Arthur Neate.[citation needed] Arthur Neate was an active military intelligence officer at the time when a Times article was printed in 1927 describing the Haversack Ruse and Meinertzhagen's (fraudulent) role in it. Neate, therefore, could not publicly refute the false claims without violating security norms, though he did finally correct the record in 1956. The true author of the ruse, Lt Col Belgrave, had never contradicted Meinertzhagen's account because he was killed in action on 13 June 1918.[citation needed]
In the Second World War, the ruse inspired Winston Churchill to create the London Controlling Section, which planned countless Allied deception campaigns during the war, and such operations as Mincemeat and diversions covering D-Day were influenced by the Haversack Ruse.[31]
Military intelligence reservations
editAnother story from 1917 refers to a number of Arab spies suspected of wandering through British lines in disguise. Meinertzhagen caught a couple of Arabs and extracted the identity of their Ottoman paymaster, a merchant who lived in Beersheba. He sent him money with an Arab he knew would talk. The merchant was executed by the Turks.[32] "Near the end of 1917, having participated in no battles, he was ordered back to England for reassignment [and] found office duty as dreary as ever."[33]
Meinertzhagen was outraged by the continual sorties to bomb the enemy camp, given the bombs always missed their target and invaluable reconnaissance planes were shot down with lives lost. On one such raid, as many as eight planes went down. From an intelligence viewpoint, it was pointless, as the Germans gave as good as they got in return to no overall gain.[34] He hated the notion that the Holy City of Jerusalem would be bombed from the air, and expressed outrage when this occurred, for example, the bombing of the enemy's HQ at Mount of Olives. Allenby told him that the Turks had to be induced to escape Jerusalem, northwards if possible, so a boundary was set at 6 miles (9.7 km), a no-fighting zone to facilitate their flight.[35]
Mandate Palestine and Israel
editFrom the spring of 1918 until August, he commuted between England and France, delivering lectures on intelligence to groups of officers – then was assigned full-time to France at GHQ. After the armistice, he attended the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 and was Edmund Allenby's chief political officer, involved in the creation of the Palestine Mandate, which eventually led to the creation of the state of Israel. In the film A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia (1990), which depicted the Paris Peace Conference, Meinertzhagen was a major character and was played by Jim Carter. His unpublished diaries hint, among other exploits, at a successful rescue attempt of one of the Czarist-Russian Grand Duchesses, possibly Tatiana (see The Romanov Conspiracies by Michael Occleshaw).
In the August 1920 Report of the Palin Commission, Meinertzhagen was attacked for an alleged bias:
...it is fairly clear from Colonel Meinertzhagen's own statement that what he demands is not this equal holding of the scales, but a definite bias in favour of the Zionists. He is wholly unable to appreciate the justice of the native case, which he dismisses contemptuously as "superficially justifiable", because in his view, the Arab is a very inferior person... It is fairly clear that, just as in one or two unfortunate cases certain individual officials have betrayed anti-Zionist bias, so Colonel Meinertzhagen arrived with a definite anti-Arab bias and a prejudice in favour of Zionism and took his views from the Zionists alone. It is possible that the unfortunate example of Colonel Gabriel threw him violently into the opposite camp; there is something significant in his admission to Brig. General Waters Taylor that he believed that he was Dr. Weizmann's nominee. A careful examination of Colonel Meinertzhagen's reckless championship of the Zionist cause fails to convince the Court that he has added materially to the proof of general bias charged against the O.E.T.A.(S) officials, while Colonel Meinertzhagen's own indiscretions on a tour which was apparently intended to conciliate the Arabs, reveal him as an agent who, however capable of doing good work in other spheres is singularly out of place in the East.
— Report of the Palin Commission, August 1920
Israeli historian Tom Segev considers Meinertzhagen both a "great antisemite and a great Zionist," quoting from his Middle East Diary: "I am imbued with antisemitic feelings. It was indeed an accursed day that allowed Jews and not Christians to introduce to the world the principles of Zionism and that allowed Jewish brains and Jewish money to carry them out, almost unhelped by Christians save a handful of enthusiasts in England."[36]
In Weizmann's biography, he wrote of Meinertzhagen,
At our first meeting, he told me the following story of himself: he had been an anti-Semite, though all he had known about Jews had been what he picked up in a few casual, anti-Semitic books. But he had also met some of the rich Jews, who had not been particularly attractive. But then, in the Near East, he had come across Aaron Aaronsohn, a Palestinian Jew, also a man of great courage and superior intelligence, devoted to Palestine. Aaronson was a botanist, and the discoverer of wild wheat. With Aaronson, Meinertzhagen had many talks about Palestine, and was so impressed by him that he completely changed his mind and became an ardent Zionist – which he has remained till this day. And that not merely in words. Whenever he can perform a service for the Jews or Palestine he will go out of his way to do so.[37]
In 1973 Middle East Diary was published in Hebrew, translated by Aharon Amir.[38]
Diaries
editMeinertzhagen was a prolific diarist and published four books based on these diaries. However, his Middle East Diary contains entries that are in all probability fictional, including those on T. E. Lawrence and a bit of absurd slapstick concerning Adolf Hitler. In October 1934, Meinertzhagen claimed to have mocked Hitler in response to being "baffled when Hitler raised his arm in the Nazi salute and said, 'Heil Hitler.' After a moment's thought, Meinertzhagen says he raised his own arm in an identical salute and proclaimed, 'Heil Meinertzhagen'."[39] He claimed to have carried a loaded pistol in his coat pocket at a meeting with Hitler and Ribbentrop in July 1939 and was "seriously troubled" about not shooting when he had the chance, adding "... [I]f this war breaks out, as I feel sure it will, then I shall feel very much to blame for not killing these two."[40]
Authors Lockman and Garfield show that Meinertzhagen later falsified his entries. The original diaries are kept at Rhodes House (the Bodleian Library), Oxford, and contain differences in the paper used for certain entries as well as in the typewriter ribbon used, and oddities exist in the page numbering.[citation needed]
Dates of promotions
edit- Second lieutenant on 18 January 1899[10]
- Lieutenant on 8 February 1900
- Captain in February 1905[41]
- Major in September 1915[42]
- Brevet lieutenant colonel in March 1918[43]
- Brevet colonel in August 1918.[44]
Meinertzhagen retired with a major's pension in 1925.[45] Upon retirement, British officers are allowed to use the title of the highest rank held on active duty, thus he continued to be addressed as "Colonel".[46] In 1939, Meinertzhagen was reinstated as a lieutenant colonel for service during World War II.[47] Appointed as a Military Intelligence officer, G.S.O.-3 (General Staff Officer, 3rd grade), his duties were confined mainly to public relations work.[48]
Character
editMeinertzhagen has inspired three biographies since his death in 1967. Early biographers largely lionized him as a grand elder statesman of espionage and ornithology.[49]
T. E. Lawrence, a sometime colleague in 1919 and again 1921, described him more ambiguously and with due attention to his violence:
Meinertzhagen knew no half measures. He was logical, an idealist of the deepest, and so possessed by his convictions that he was willing to harness evil to the chariot of good. He was a strategist, a geographer, and a silent laughing masterful man; who took as blithe a pleasure in deceiving his enemy (or his friend) by some unscrupulous jest, as in spattering the brains of a cornered mob of Germans one by one with his African knob-kerri. His instincts were abetted by an immensely powerful body and a savage brain....
— T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, 1926
Meinertzhagen himself traced the "evil" side of his personality to a period during his childhood when he was subjected to severe physical abuse at the hands of a sadistic schoolmaster when he was at Fonthill boarding school in Sussex:
Even now I feel the pain of that moment, when something seemed to leave me, something good; and something evil entered into my soul. Was it God who forsook me, and the devil took his place. But whatever left me has never returned, neither have I been able to entirely cast out the evil which entered me at that moment.... The undeserved beatings and sadistic treatment which were my lot in childhood so upset my mind that much of my present character can be traced to Fonthill.[50]
Gavin Maxwell wrote about how his parents would scare him and other children to behave themselves when Meinertzhagen visited with "... remember ... he has killed people with his bare hands..."[51]
Salim Ali noted Meinertzhagen's special hatred for Mahatma Gandhi and his refusal to believe that Indians could govern themselves.[52]
In The Meinertzhagen Mystery, Garfield presents a fuller perspective of Meinertzhagen as not only a fraud, but also a murderer. The book argues many of Meinertzhagen's accomplishments were myths, including the famous haversack incident, which Garfield claims Meinertzhagen neither came up with nor carried out.[53] In another example, Garfield researched Meinertzhagen diary records, noting three meetings on separate dates with Adolf Hitler. Although Meinertzhagen was in Berlin on these dates in 1934, 1935, and 1939, Garfield found no record of any of these alleged meetings in surviving German chancellory records, British embassy files, British intelligence reports, or newspapers of the day.[54]
Garfield's research leads him to speculate that Richard also killed his second wife, Annie (born Anne Constance Jackson daughter of Major Randle Jackson of Swordale, married Meinertzhagen in 1921[55]), an ornithologist, and that her death was not an accident as claimed and ruled in court.[56] She died in 1928 at age 40 in a remote Scottish village in an incident that was officially ruled a shooting accident. The finding was that she accidentally shot herself in the head with a revolver during target practice alone with Richard, but Garfield argues Meinertzhagen shot her out of fear that she would expose him and his fraudulent activities.[56] Storrs L. Olson has pointed out some errors in Garfield's research, while confirming the validity of its overall negative tone.[57]
Meinertzhagen has been referred to as a "serial psychopath" in relation to his acts in Kenya.[58]
Zoology
editAs Garfield writes, "From boyhood on, [Meinertzhagen] had been in tune with nature; he took photographs, made drawings, and provided armchair tourists with keen descriptions of rain forests and snowy mountains ... and discovered new (previously unrecorded) species of bats, birds, and mallophaga (bird lice)".[59] In 1940, a genus of bird lice, Meinertzhageniella, was named after him by the German zoologist Wolfdietrich Eichler. He became a chairman of the British Ornithologists' Club and a recipient in 1951 of the Godman-Salvin Medal; the British Museum (Natural History) named a room after him.[60]
Discoveries
editMeinertzhagen "first achieved a sliver of international fame when he discovered, killed, stuffed, and shipped back to London the first known to Europeans giant African forest hog, soon dubbed Hylochoerus meinertzhageni, and attributed to Richard Meinertzhagen". At that time, while on active duty in 1903, he was "fearlessly exploring and mapping areas no European had seen before."[41]
He later also discovered the Afghan snowfinch or Montifringilla theresae, and the Moroccan Riparia rupestris theresae and named them, and ten others, after Theresa Clay.[61][62]
Nicoll's Birds of Egypt (1930)
editHe edited Nicoll's Birds of Egypt in 1930. Michael J. Nicoll was a friend and assistant director of the Zoological Gardens at Giza; Nicoll attempted to write a comprehensive guide to the ornithology of Egypt, but died in 1925 before it could be published. The work was finished by Meinertzhagen with contributions of his own independent research and illustrations. It was printed with the title "that seems appropriate," "Nicoll's Birds of Egypt by Col. R. Meinertzhagen."[63]
Birds of Arabia (1954); controversy
editIn 1948–49, he was accompanied by Dr. Phillip Clancey on an ornithological expedition to Arabia, Yemen, Aden, Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, and South Africa. As the author of numerous taxonomic and other works on birds, and possessing a vast collection of bird and bird lice specimens, he was long considered one of Britain's greatest ornithologists. Meinhertzhagen's magnum opus, Birds of Arabia (1954), however made extensive use of the unpublished manuscript of another naturalist, George Bates, who has been insufficiently credited in the work.[64][65]
Fraud and theft
editIn the 1990s, an analysis of Meinertzhagen's bird collection at the Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum in Tring, Hertfordshire, revealed large-scale fraud involving theft and falsification. The birds claimed as specimens collected by Meinertzhagen matched with the ones that had been reported missing and the examination of the style of specimen preparation and the DNA sequences of the cotton used inside them matched the cotton used in other specimens prepared by the collectors of the stolen specimens. This also corroborated hear-say and other evidence on the specimen fraud.
Many of the specimens that he submitted as his own were found to be missing samples belonging to the Natural History Museum and collected by others, such as Hugh Whistler. A species of owl, the forest owlet, thought to have gone extinct, was rediscovered in 1997 based on searches made in the locality where the original specimens were collected.[66] Searches for the bird had failed before as these were made in a locality falsely claimed by Meinertzhagen. More research by Pamela C. Rasmussen and Robert Prŷs-Jones indicates the fraud was even more extensive than first thought.[67][68][69][70]
Personal life
editFirst marriage
editIn 1911, Meinertzhagen married Armorel, the daughter of Colonel Herman Le Roy-Lewis, who commanded the Hampshire Yeomanry.[1][7] This marriage was dissolved in 1919.[71]
Second marriage
editIn 1921, Meinertzhagen married Anne Constance Jackson, a fellow ornithologist and the daughter of Major Randle Jackson of Swordale, Ross-shire in Scotland. They had three children: Anne (born 1921), Daniel (born 1925), and Randle (born 1928).[72] From about 1926, Meinertzhagen started to have a cold relationship with his wife and became increasingly close with his cousin Tess Clay, then aged 15, spending much time with her sisters and her.
In 1928, three months after the birth of Randle, Anne was killed, aged 40, at her birth village of Swordale. The finding, ruled in court, was that she accidentally shot herself in the head with a revolver during target practice alone with Richard.[55] As noted above, Brian Garfield's research led him to speculate that in fact she was murdered by Meinertzhagen, out of fear that she would expose him and his fraudulent activities.[56] This idea was never conclusively proved or disproved.
Annie Constance Meinertzhagen left £113,466 (net personalty £18,733) in her will to her husband if he remained her widower, while if he remarried, he was to get an annuity of £1200 and interest in their London home for life.[73]
Later relationship
editMeinertzhagen never remarried; however he had a lasting relationship with Tess Clay, more than three decades his junior. The unmarried couple lived in Kensington in adjacent buildings originally constructed with an internal passage connecting the foyers of the two houses.[74] Clay was his housekeeper, secretary, "confidante", and later scientific partner who studied and eventually documented the vast collections of bird lice that Meinertzhagen had gathered.
When they travelled, they sometimes took separate rooms. He introduced her as his housekeeper or cousin or sometimes, inaccurately, as his niece.[61] If Meinertzhagen and Clay's relationship was physical is unknown; Meinertzhagen's friend Victor Rothschild asked Meinertzhagen this outright, but was told "in no uncertain terms to shut up";[72] and a 1951 article in Time[75] referred to their relationship with "wink-wink, nudge-nudge innuendo".[76]
Legacy
editHe was played by Anthony Andrews in the film The Lighthorsemen (1987).
Published works
editMeinertzhagen wrote numerous papers for scientific journals such as the Ibis, as well as reports on intelligence work while in the army. Books authored or edited by him include:
- 1930 – Nicoll's Birds of Egypt. (Ed), (2 vols). London: Hugh Rees.
- 1947 – The Life of a Boy: Daniel Meinertzhagen, 1925–1944. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
- 1954 – Birds of Arabia. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
- 1957 – Kenya Diary 1902–1906. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
- 1959 – Middle East Diary, 1917–1956. London: Cresset Press.
- 1959 – Pirates and Predators. The piratical and predatory habits of birds. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
- 1960 – Army Diary 1899–1926. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
- 1964 – Diary of a Black Sheep. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.
References
edit- ^ a b c Foot, M.R. D. (May 2006) [2004]. "Meinertzhagen, Richard (1878–1967)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37754.
- ^ Garfield, The Meinertzhagen Mystery, p. viii
- ^ During the First World War, apparently in an attempt to overcome rampant Germanophobia, Meinertzhagen invented the fiction of having Danish ancestry [Garfield, p. 7]
- ^ a b Garfield, p. 70
- ^ Garfield, p. 46
- ^ "Page 1675 | Issue 26835, 23 March 1897 | London Gazette | The Gazette". www.thegazette.co.uk. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
- ^ a b Edinburgh Gazette, 25 February 1916, p. 329.
- ^ Garfield, pp. 46-47.
- ^ Meinertzhagen, R. (1959). "Nineteenth century recollections". Ibis. 101 (1): 46–52. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1959.tb02355.x.
- ^ a b Garfield, p. 50
- ^ "No. 27439". The London Gazette. 3 June 1902. p. 3608.
- ^ Garfield, p. 56
- ^ Garfield, p. 58
- ^ "Europeans In East Africa - View entry". www.europeansineastafrica.co.uk. Retrieved 6 November 2023.
- ^ Garfield, p. 59
- ^ Garfield, p. 68
- ^ Parsons, Timothy (2010). The Rule of Empires. Oxford University Press. p. 291. ISBN 9780199746194. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ^ Okoth, Assa (2006). A History of Africa, 1800–1915. E.A.E.P. pp. 198–199. ISBN 9789966253576.
- ^ Herbert, Edwin (2003). Small Wars and Skirmishes 1902–18. Nottingham. pp. 78–84. ISBN 1901543056.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Pflanz, Mike (15 April 2006). "Kenyans welcome home sacred relics stolen by British". The Telegraph.
- ^ Garfield, p. 69
- ^ MacKenzie, John M. (1988). The Empire of Nature. Manchester University Press. p. 159. ISBN 9780719052279.
- ^ Garfield, p. 89
- ^ Charles Miller, Battle for the Bundu – the First World War in East Africa, pp. 56–71; ISBN 0-02-584930-1
- ^ Garfield, p. 116; he was nominated for the award by J.C. Smuts, the new commanding general, "who took a liking to Meinertzhagen"
- ^ Garfield, p. 119
- ^ R. M's Army Diary, 1899–1926, pp. 224–5; Sheffy, British Military Intelligence, pp. 269–73; J.D. Grainger, Palestine 1917, pp. 100–1
- ^ "Musings/Such a strange bird: The revisionist vultures are now about to pick at Meinertzhagen's carcass". Haaretz. Haaretz.com. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ^ Garfield, Brian; The Meinertzhagen Mystery, 2007; p. 28;
- ^ Garfield, Brian; The Meinertzhagen Mystery, 2007; p. 29;
- ^ Cave Brown, Anthony, Bodyguard of Lies, p. 311 (2-volume edition), Harper and Row, 1975
- ^ Army Diary, p. 216
- ^ Garfield, p. 130
- ^ Army Diary, pp. 214–15; Raleigh and Jones, War in the Air, pp. 232–3; Grainger, Palestine, p. 103
- ^ Grainger, p. 180
- ^ Segev, Tom. One Palestine, Complete, Hold Paperbacks, 1999, p. 95
- ^ Weizmann, Chaim. Trial and Error, Harper Press, New York, 1949, pp. 180–181
- ^ Published 1973 by the Shikmona Publishing Company of Jerusalem - קולונל ר. מיינרצהאגן, "פרקי יומן מזרח תיכוני", מתורגם על ידי אהרון אמיר, הוצאת שקמונה, ת.ד.4044, ירושלים
- ^ Garfield, p. 189
- ^ Saunders, Alan. Profile of Meinertzhagen Archived 5 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, abc.net.au; accessed 9 April 2015.
- ^ a b Garfield, p. 60
- ^ Garfield, p. 71
- ^ Garfield, p. 212
- ^ Garfield, p. 255
- ^ Garfield, pp. 48, 255
- ^ Garfield, pp. 48, 255
- ^ Garfield, pp. 212, 218
- ^ Garfield, pp. 212, 218
- ^ Garfield, p. vii
- ^ Meinertzhagen, Richard (1964). Diary of a Black Sheep. Great Britain: Oliver & Boyd. pp. 161, 173.
- ^ Ali, p. 162
- ^ Ali, The Fall of a Sparrow, pp. 248–249
- ^ Garfield, pp. 14–36
- ^ Garfield, pp. 188–192
- ^ a b "Highland lady shot dead". Dundee Courier. 7 July 1928. p. 5 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ a b c Garfield, p. 172
- ^ Olson, Storrs L. (2008). "The Meinertzhagen Mystery: The Life and Legend of a Colossal Fraud". The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 120 (4): 917–926. doi:10.1676/0043-5643-120.4.917. S2CID 85251201.
- ^ Ogot, Bethwell Allan (2012). Hino, Hiroyuki; Lonsdale, John; Ranis, Gustav; Stewart, Frances (eds.). Ethnic Diversity and Economic Instability in Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 99.
- ^ Garfield, p. 161
- ^ Garfield, p. 3
- ^ a b Garfield, p. 193
- ^ Garfield, p. 312
- ^ Garfield, p. 169
- ^ Garfield, p. 209
- ^ Cowles, Graham S. (1997). "George Latimer Bates 1863–1940 an investigation into the history of his unpublished 'Birds of Arabia' manuscripts". Archives of Natural History. 24 (2): 213–235. doi:10.3366/anh.1997.24.2.213. ISSN 0260-9541.
- ^ Rasmussen, P.C. and Collar, N.J. (1999). "Major specimen fraud in the Forest Owlet Heteroglaux (Athene auct.) blewitti." Ibis 141 (1):11–21. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1999.tb04258.x.
- ^ Rasmussen, P. C.; Prŷs-Jones, R. P. (2003). Collar, N. J.; Fisher, C. T.; Feare, C. J. (eds.). "History vs mystery: the reliability of museum specimen data". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 123A (Why Museums Matter: Avian Archives in an Age of Extinction): 66–94.
- ^ Rasmussen, P.C. (1998). "Tytler's Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus tytleri: non-breeding distribution, morphological discrimination, and ageing" (PDF). Forktail. 14: 17–29. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ^ Knox, 1993.
- ^ Robert Prŷs-Jones, Daniel M. Brooks & Keith A. Arnold (2009). "A second specimen of Sabine's Gull Xema sabini from Texas, with a review of Meinertzhagen- generated confusion surrounding the first" (PDF). Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 129 (4): 202–205. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- ^ [J. N. K. and A. L. T.] (1967). "Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen C.B.E., D.S.O., 1878–1967". Ibis. 109 (4): 617–620. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1967.tb00031.x.
- ^ a b Garfield, The Meinertzhagen Mystery
- ^ "Rich lady's bequest to husband". Western Daily Press. 25 October 1928. p. 12 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ Garfield, p. 164; Clay inherited the property from her parents, Sir Felix Clay and Rachel (née Hobhouse) Clay. Rachel Clay was a first cousin of Meinertzhagen.
- ^ "Science: Niche for the Colonel". Time. 2 July 1951. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
- ^ Garfield 2007, pp. 310–311.
Bibliography
editOwn writings
edit- Middle East Diary, 1917–1956, London, 1959
- Army Diary, 1899–1926, Edinburgh, 1960
Primary and secondary sources
edit- Ali, Salim. The Fall of a Sparrow. Delhi: Oxford University Press. 1985. xv, 265 pp., ISBN 978-0195687477
- Boxall, Peter. "The legendary Richard Meinertzhagen." The Army Quarterly and Defence Journal, [October 1990] 120(4): pp. 459–462
- Capstick, P.H. Warrior: The Legend of Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen. 1998, ISBN 978-0312182717
- Cocker, Mark. Richard Meinertzhagen. Soldier, Scientist and Spy. London: Secker & Warburg. 1989. 292 pp., ISBN 978-0436102998
- Dalton, R. "Ornithologists stunned by bird collector's deceit." Nature [September 2005] 437(7057): pp. 302–3
- Fortey, Richard. Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum. New York: HarperCollins. 2008, ISBN 978-0007209897
- Garfield, Brian (2007). The Meinertzhagen Mystery: The Life and Legend of a Colossal Fraud. Washington, DC: Potomac Books. ISBN 978-1-59797-160-7.
- Hindle, Edward (1967). "Obituary: Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen, CBE, DSO. 1878–1967". The Geographical Journal. 133 (3): 429–430.
- Jones, Robert F. (1991). "The Kipkororor Chronicles". The Quarterly Journal of Military History. 3 (3): 38–47.
- Judd, Alan. "Eccentric hero." New Statesman and Society [23 June 1989] 2(55): pp. 37–38
- Knox, Alan G. (July 1993). "Richard Meinertzhagen – a case of fraud examined". Ibis. 135 (3): 320–325. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1993.tb02851.x.
- Lockman, J. N. Meinertzhagen's Diary Ruse. 1995, p. 114, ISBN 978-0964889705
- Lord, John. Duty, Honour, Empire. New York: Random House. 1970, ISBN 978-0091058203
- Mangan, J.A. (October 1993). "Shorter notices". English Historical Review. 108 (429): 1062. doi:10.1093/ehr/cviii.ccccxxix.1062-a.
- Occleshaw, Michael. The Romanov Conspiracies. London: Chapman Publishers. 1993, ASIN: B000M6DS1A
- Rankin, Nicolas (2008). A Genius for Deception: How Cunning Helped the British Win Two World Wars. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-538704-9.
- Vines, Gail (7 May 1994). "Bird world in a flap about species fraud". New Scientist. 142 (1924): 10.
- Wa Tiong'o, Ngugi (1981). Detained: A Prison Writer's Diary. London: Heinemann Educational Books. ISBN 978-0435902407.
External links
edit- Seabrook, J. "Ruffled Feathers", The New Yorker [29 May 2006], p. 59
- Natural history museum, London
- Meinertzhagen Biography
- Meet the Meinertzhagens at Mottisfont (National Trust)
- Meinertzhagen family photo (image and names of sitters)
- Meinertzhagen, Georgina (1912). A Bremen family. London: Longmans, Green and Co.