
Voices of Europe. Hitler’s Cosmopolitan Bastard: Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi
Martyn Bond
Saturday, 6 November 2021
2:00pm
1 hour
Oxford Martin School: Lecture Theatre
£7 - £12.50
Academic, journalist and author Dr Martyn Bond uncovers the life of an Austrian count who set up a pro-European movement to rival the Nazis and was the first to create a European flag and call for a European stamp, a common currency, and a European passport.
Bond has written the first English biography of Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, branded a “cosmopolitan bastard” by Hitler on account of his Jewish wife and his Japanese mother. Bond explains how Coudenhove-Kalergi’s ideas on European unity have long outlived Hitler. The count twice escaped assassination and fled to New York where he rallied fellow Europeans behind the idea of a united Europe after the war. He was the model for Viktor Laszlo in the famous wartime film Casablanca. The count influenced Churchill’s views on a united Europe, and both French President Emmanuel Macron and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov have recently quoted him in their speeches.
Bond is a fellow at regent’s University London. He is a former senior European civil servant, a former BBC Berlin correspondent and a writer and academic working on contemporary European themes.






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