The secret lives of Trebitsch Lincoln /

Revolutionary, spy, missionary, and conman, Trebitsch Lincoln was one of the most bizarre figures in modern history. A juvenile criminal in his native Hungary, he emigrated to Canada in 1900 as a missionary in Montreal and then became, successively, Anglican curate in Kent, Liberal Member of the Bri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wasserstein, Bernard
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Harmondsworth : Penguin, 1989
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Summary:Revolutionary, spy, missionary, and conman, Trebitsch Lincoln was one of the most bizarre figures in modern history. A juvenile criminal in his native Hungary, he emigrated to Canada in 1900 as a missionary in Montreal and then became, successively, Anglican curate in Kent, Liberal Member of the British Parliament, German agent in both world wars, outlaw in the USA, member of the 1920 right-wing German military government, conspirator in the "White International," adviser to warlords in China, and Buddhist abbot in Shanghai. Historian Bernard Wasserstein unraveled the career of the many-faceted Trebitsch Lincoln by unearthing police reports, intelligence files, and diplomatic dispatches from more than a dozen countries and integrating them with numerous other archival documents and unpublished papers, to create a striking portrait of an enigmatic man. Trebitsch bamboozled many, including Lloyd George, Himmler and J. Edgar Hoover, and his life story mirrors the unquiet spirit of his age.--From publisher description
Item Description:Originally published: New Haven; London : Yale University Press, 1988
Physical Description:390 p. : ill. ; 20 cm
Awards:Winner of the 1988 Golden Dagger Award for Non-Fiction
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:0140119469 (pbk.)
9780140119466 (pbk.)