Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln
Ignatius Timothy Trebitsch-Lincoln | |
---|---|
225px Trebitsch-Lincoln as Chao Kung | |
Born | 4 April 1879 Paks, Hungary |
Died | 4 October 1943 Shanghai, China |
Nationality | Jewish (born in Hungary) |
Occupation | International con man |
Ignatius Timothy Trebitsch-Lincoln (Hungarian: Trebitsch-Lincoln Ignác, German: Ignaz Thimoteus Trebitzsch; 4 Apri 1879 - 4 October 1943) was a Hungarian Jewish con-man and fraudster who spent parts of his life as a Protestant missionary, Anglican priest, British Member of Parliament, convict, German insurgent and double-agent, Buddhist abbot, and propagandist for National Socialist Germany.
Contents
Early clerical career
Ignácz Trebitsch, Hungarian: Trebitsch Ignác(z) (later changed to Trebitsch Lincoln) was born to an Orthodox Jewish family in the town of Paks (also Orthodox shtetl) in Hungary in 1879, subsequently moving with his family to Budapest. His father, Náthán Trebitsch, (Hungarian: Trebitsch Náthán) was from Moravia.
After leaving school he enrolled in the Royal Hungarian Academy of Dramatic Art,[1] but was frequently in trouble with the police for stealing watches. In 1897 he fled abroad, ending up in London, where he took up with some Christian missionaries and converted from Judaism. He was baptised on Christmas day 1899, and set off to study at a Lutheran seminary in Breklum in Schleswig-Holstein, destined for the ministry. Restless, he was sent to Canada to carry out missionary work among the Jews of Montreal, first on behalf of the Presbyterians, and then the Anglicans. He returned to England in 1903 after a quarrel over the size of his stipend.
He became Tribich Lincoln (or I. T. T. Lincoln) by deed poll in October 1904 and secured British naturalization, in May 1909.[1]
Member of Parliament
Trebitsch-Lincoln had the ability to talk himself into virtually any situation, and into any company. He made the acquaintance of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who appointed him as a curate in Appledore, Kent, his last ecclesiastical post. Soon after he met Seebohm Rowntree, the chocolate millionaire and prominent member of the Liberal Party, who offered him the position of his private secretary. With Rowntree's support, he was nominated in 1909 as the prospective Liberal candidate for the Parliamentary constituency of Darlington in County Durham, even though he was still a Hungarian citizen at the time. In the election of January 1910 he beat the sitting Unionist, whose family had held the seat for decades. However, despite this dramatic entrance to political life, MPs were not at the time paid and Lincoln's financial troubles grew worse. He was unable to stand when a second general election was called in November 1910. Darlington returned to its old allegiance.
International confidence man
In the years leading up to the outbreak of the First World War Trebitsch-Lincoln was involved in a variety of failed commercial endeavours, living for a time in Bucharest, hoping to make money in the oil industry. Back in London with no money, he offered his services to the British government as a spy. After his rejection, he went to Holland and made contact with the Germans who employed him as a double-agent.
Returning to England, he narrowly escaped arrest, leaving for the United States in 1915, where he made contact with the German military attaché, Franz von Papen. Papen was instructed by Berlin to have nothing to do with him, whereupon Trebitsch sold his "story" to the New York World Magazine, which published under the banner headline Revelation of I. T. T. Lincoln, Former Member of Parliament Who Became a Spy.
The British government, anxious to avoid any embarrassment, employed the Pinkerton agency to track down the renegade. He was returned to England – not on a charge of espionage, which was not covered by the Anglo-American extradition treaty, but of fraud, far more apt in the circumstances. He served three years in Parkhurst Prison on the Isle of Wight, and was released and deported in 1919.
Germany and Austria
A penniless refugee, Trebitsch-Lincoln worked his way bit by bit into the extreme right-wing and militarist fringe in Weimar Germany, making the acquaintance of Wolfgang Kapp and Erich Ludendorff among others. In 1920 he helped to initiate the Kapp Putsch and was considered one of the "brains" behind the rebellion.[2] He was later appointed press censor to the new government. In this capacity he met Adolf Hitler, who flew in from Munich the day before the Putsch collapsed.
With the fall of Kapp, Trebitsch fled south from Munich to Vienna to Budapest, intriguing all along the way, linking up with whole variety of fringe political factions, such as a loose alliance of monarchists and reactionaries from all over Europe known as the White International. Entrusted with the organisation's archives, he promptly sold the information to the secret services of various governments. Tried and acquitted on a charge of high treason in Austria, he was deported yet again, ending up in China, where he took up employment under three different warlords including Wu Peifu.
Conversion to Buddhism
Supposedly after a mystic experience in the late 1920s, Trebitsch converted to Buddhism, becoming a monk and taking the name Chao Kung. In 1931 he rose to the position of abbot, establishing his own monastery in Shanghai. All initiates were required to hand over their possessions to Abbot Chao Kung,(Ch. 照空 pinyin: Zhào Kōng) as he now called himself, who also spent his time seducing nuns.
In 1937 he transferred his loyalties yet again, this time to the Japanese, producing anti-British propaganda on their behalf. Chinese sources say the opposite, that he wrote numerous letters and articles for the European press condemning Japanese imperial aggression in China. After the outbreak of the Second World War, he also made contact with National Socialist Germany, offering to broadcast for them and to raise up all the Buddhists of the East against any remaining British influence in the area. The chief of the Gestapo in the Far East, SS Colonel Joseph Mesinger, urged that this scheme receive serious attention. It was even seriously suggested that Trebitsch be allowed to accompany German agents to Tibet to implement the scheme.
Heinrich Himmler was enthusiastic, as was Rudolf Hess, but it all came to nothing after Hess flew to Scotland in May 1941. After this, Hitler put an end to all such pseudo-mystical schemes. Even so, Trebitsch continued his work for the German and Japanese security services in Shanghai until his death in 1943.
Articles in Völkischer Beobachter
Trebitsch wrote anti-Jewish articles in Völkischer Beobachter. He stated, that as a born Jew he can best see the dangerousness and mistakes of the Jewish race.
References
- Wasserstein, Bernard (1988). The Secret Lives of Trebitsch Lincoln. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-04076-8.
- The Treacherous Mr. Trebisch by Eliza Segal
- "On the Trail of Trebitsch Lincoln, triple agent.". New York Times. 1988-05-08. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE1DD1638F93BA35756C0A96E948260&sec=&pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
- John Gross (1988-05-17). "Books of The Times; On Clear Duplicity and Doubtful Consequence". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DEFDE133FF934A25756C0A96E948260&sec=&pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2008-08-10. by John Gross, May 17, 1988
- He was an author, fraudster, MP, fantasist, charmer... but he did not go to Belmarsh by Matthew Parris, July 28, 2003
- Ju-Zan 巨赞, “Yang heshang Zhao-Kong,” 洋和尚照空 in Wenshi ziliao xuanji 文史资料选辑, No. 79, ed. Quanguo Zhengxie wenshi ziliao weiyuanhui 全国政协文史资料研究委员会, 1982, pp. 165–177.
See also
External links
- The dramatic art of Ignácz Trebitsch (Trebitsch Lincoln)
- Books of The Times: On Clear Duplicity and Doubtful Consequence
- The Treacherous Mr. Trebisch
- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Herbert Pease |
Member of Parliament for Darlington January 1910 – December 1910 |
Succeeded by Herbert Pease |
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Hungarian language text
- Articles containing German language text
- English Anglicans
- Hungarian Anglicans
- Hungarian Protestants
- British Christian missionaries
- Christian missionaries in Canada
- Hungarian Christian missionaries
- British Buddhists
- Hungarian Buddhist monks
- Members of the United Kingdom Parliament for English constituencies
- Liberal Party (UK) MPs
- UK MPs 1910
- German spies
- Jewish National socialist collaborators
- People acquitted of treason
- People deported from the United Kingdom
- British people of Hungarian descent
- British expatriates in China
- Jewish Chinese history
- Converts to Anglicanism from Judaism
- English Jews
- Hungarian Jews
- Hungarian people of Czech descent
- People from Tolna County
- People from Shanghai
- 1879 births
- 1943 deaths
- Jewish impostors
- Content from Wikipedia