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Benjamin Bathurst (diplomat) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benjamin Bathurst (diplomat)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benjamin Bathurst
Born March 18, 1784
London, United Kingdom
Died 1809?
Nationality British
Occupation Diplomatic envoy
Spouse Phillida Call
Parents Henry Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich

Benjamin Bathurst (March 18, 1784 - 1809?) was a British diplomatic envoy who disappeared in Germany during the Napoleonic Wars. He was the third son of Henry Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich.[1]

Contents

[edit] Career

Benjamin Bathurst entered the diplomatic service at an early age and was promoted to the post of Secretary of the British Legation at Leghorn. In 1805 he married Phillida Call, daughter of Sir John Call, a Cornish landowner and baronet.[1]

In 1809, he was despatched to Vienna as an envoy by his relative Henry Bathurst, pro tempore Secretary for Foreign Affairs. His mission was to assist in the reconstruction of Britain and Austria's alliance and to try to encourage Emperor Francis II to declare war on France, which the Emperor did in April.

However, the Austrians were forced to abandon Vienna to the French forces and eventually sued for peace after they were badly defeated by the French at the Battle of Wagram in July 1809. Bathurst was promptly recalled to London and decided that the safest route was to travel north and take ship from Hamburg.

[edit] Disappearance

On 25 November 1809, Bathurst and his German courier, a Herr Krause, who were travelling by chaise under the aliases of "Baron de Koch" and "Fischer" respectively, stopped at the town of Perleberg, west of Berlin.

After ordering fresh horses at the post house, Bathurst and his companion walked to a nearby inn, the White Swan. After ordering an early dinner, Bathurst is said to have spent several hours writing in a small room set aside for him at the inn. The travellers' departure was delayed and it was not until 9 pm that they were told that the horses were about to be harnessed to their carriage. Bathurst immediately left his room, followed shortly afterwards by Krause, who was surprised to find Bathurst was not in the chaise when he reached it and indeed was nowhere to be found.

The disappearance did not create much excitement at the time, since the country was infested with bandits, stragglers from the French army, and German revolutionaries. Additionally, murders and robberies were so common that the loss of one commercial traveller (which Bathurst was travelling as) was barely noticed, especially since at the time there were hardly any legal authorities in Prussia.

News of Bathurst's disappearance did not reach England for some weeks, until Krause managed to reach Hamburg and take ship for England. In December Bathurst's father, the Bishop of Norwich, received a summons from Arthur Wellesley (later to become the Duke of Wellington) to attend him at Apsley House, where Wellesley informed the Bishop of his son's disappearance.

Bathurst's wife Phillida immediately left for Germany to search for her husband, accompanied by the explorer Heinrich Röntgen. They arrived at Perleberg to find that the authorities had been looking into the affair and that a Captain von Klitzing had been put in charge of the investigation. A search of Perleberg found a pair of breeches in a copse which Mrs. Bathurst identified as belonging to her husband. A reward of 500 thalers was offered for any news and money was paid to members of the local police to expedite matters. This, however, caused the waters to be muddied as many false reports and offers of information were made by people seeking a share of the reward.

In March, Mrs. Bathurst had the entire area of Perleberg searched at vast expense, which included the use of trained dogs, but to no avail. She then travelled to Berlin and then Paris to see Napoleon himself, hoping to obtain from him some account of her husband's fate. However, when she was received by Napoleon, he declared his ignorance of the affair and offered his assistance.

[edit] Contemporary press reports

By January 1810 the English and French press had become aware of the affair and had begun to discuss it. The Times published a piece which subsequently appeared in other English newspapers[2]:

There is too much reason to fear that the account of the death of Mr. Bathurst, late envoy to the Emperor of Austria, inserted in a Paris journal, is correct as to the principal fact. It was stated, as an article of Berlin news, of the date of December 10, that Mr. Bathurst had evinced symptoms of insanity on his journey through the city, and that he had subsequently fallen by his own hand in the vicinity of Perleberg. Information, however, has been received within these few days, which forcibly tends to fix the guilt of Mr. Bathurst's death, or disappearance, on the French Government. It appears that Mr. Bathurst left Berlin with passports from the Prussian Government, and in excellent health, both of mind and body. He was to proceed to Hamburg, but Hamburg he never reached. At some town near the French territories he was seized, as is supposed, by a party of French soldiers. What happened afterwards is not accurately known. His pantaloons have been found near the town where he was seized, and a letter in them to his wife; but nothing else. The Prussian Government, upon receiving the intelligence, evinced the deepest regret, and offered a large reward for the discovery of his body. No success, however, has attended the offer.

The French government were agitated by the accusation that they had kidnapped or murdered Bathurst and replied in their official journal, Le Moniteur Universel:

England alone, among all civilised nations, has renewed the example of paying assassins and encouraging crimes. It appears by the accounts from Berlin, that Mr. Bathurst was deranged in his mind. This is the custom of the British Cabinet - to give their diplomatic missions to the most foolish and senseless persons the nation produces. The English diplomatic corps is the only one in which examples of madness are common.

[edit] 1852 discovery

On 1852-04-15, during the demolition of a house on the Hamburg road in Perleberg three hundred paces from the White Swan, a skeleton was discovered under the threshold of the stable. The back of the skull showed a fracture as though from the blow of a heavy instrument. All of the upper teeth were perfect, but one of the lower molars showed signs of having been removed by a dentist. The owner of the house, a mason named Kiesewetter, had purchased the house in 1834 from Christian Mertens, who had been a serving man at the White Swan during the period when Bathurst disappeared.

Bathurst's sister, Mrs. Thistlethwaite, travelled to Perleberg but could not conclusively say whether the skull belonged to her brother or not.

[edit] Recent investigation

A detailed investigation conducted by writer Mike Dash [3] first published in Fortean Times[4] concluded that the allegedly mysterious details of the Bathurst disappearance had been greatly exaggerated over the years, and that Bathurst was almost certainly murdered.

[edit] References in pop culture

Bathurst's case is mentioned by Charles Fort in his book Lo!.

[edit] In science fiction

  • In H. Beam Piper's 1948 science fiction story "He Walked Around the Horses", Bathurst slips into an alternate history timeline where the American Revolution and the French Revolution were both suppressed and there were no Napoleonic Wars. In that alternate world Bathurst has a "doppelganger" serving as the Royal Governor of Georgia, there still a British colony.
  • The short novel Time Echo by "Lionel Roberts" (a pseudonym of Lionel Fanthorpe). has Bathurst accidentally transported to a future time where his hatred of Napoleon makes him join with conspirators seeking to overthrow a cruel future conqueror and tyrant.
  • Avram Davidson's "Masters of the Maze", has Bathurst as one of a select group of humans (and other sentient beings) who had penetratred to the center of a mysterious "Maze" traversing all of space and time. There he dwells in eternal repose, in company with the Biblical Enoch, the Chinese King Wen and Lao Tze, the Greek Appolonius of Tyanna, and various other sages of the past and future, some of them Martians.
  • Bathurst's disappearance is also mentioned in passing in Robert Heinlein's short story Elsewhen and Simon Hawke's TimeWars series.

[edit] In music

Bathurst is also one of the people suspected to be "Benjamin Breeg" from the song "The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg" by British heavy metal group Iron Maiden.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Bathurst, Henry (1837). Memoirs of the Late Dr. Henry Bathurst, Lord Bishop of Norwich. London: A.J. Valpy. 
  2. ^ "A Mysterious Crime" (1862). Littell's Living Age XIX: pp. 231–234. Boston: Littell, Son, and Company. 
  3. ^ Dash, Mike. The Disappearance of Benjamin Bathurst. mikedash.com. Retrieved on 2008-02-03.
  4. ^ Dash, Mike (Summer 1990), “The Disappearance of Benjamin Bathurst”, Fortean Times (no. 54): pp. 40 - 44 

[edit] External links

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