Happy odyssey carton de wiart pdf Continue Adrian Boxa de Viart's autobiography is one of the most remarkable war memoirs. He was intended for law but refused to study at Balliol College, Oxford, in 1899 to serve as a soldier in the South African War. Carton de Viart's extraordinary military career was recruited by the Somali Camel Corps (1914-15), a liaison officer with The Polish Troops (1939), membership in the British Military Mission in Yugoslavia (1941), a period as a prisoner of war (1941-43), and three years as Churchill's representative in Chan Kaishi (1943-46). (Churchill was a big fan.) During the Great War, in addition to commanding the 8th Gloucesters, Carton de Viart was a brigade of 12 GOK (1917) and a brigade OF GOC 105 (April 1918). Both of these teams were terminated by wounds. He was wounded eight times during the war (including loss of his eye and arm), won the VC during the Battle of the Somma, was mentioned in the control room six times, and was a model for Brigadier Ben Ritchie Hook in Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy. This article uses a Belgian surname: his surname - Carton de Viart, not an officer of the British Army Viart and the recipient of the Victoria Cross Sir Adrian Carton de Viartton de Viart, pictured here during the First World War as a lieutenant colonel. Born5 May 1880Brussels, BelgiumDied5 June 1963 (age 83)Aghinagh House, Killinardrish, County Cork, IrelandBuriedKillinardish Church Yard, County Cork, IrelandAllergyElical KingdomService/British Army BranchYears Service1899-19231939-1947RankLieutenant -GeneralService number836Commands held8th (service) Bn, Gloucestershire Regiment12th Brigade134th Brigade61st Infantry DivisionBax/WarETherim World War Two Somaliland campaign Battle of the Somme Passchendaele Battle of Cambrai Battle of Arras (1918) Polish-Soviet WarPolis-Ukrainian WarPolis-Lithuania War World War World War Ii Invasion of Poland The Order of the Order of St. Michael and St. George For service in DepatcheVirtuti Militari (Poland) Croix de Guerre (Belgium) Legion of Honour (France) Croix de Guerre (France) Lieutenant General Sir Adrian Paul VC, KBE, CB, CMG, DSO (May 5, 1880 - 5 June 1963) He was awarded the Victoria Cross, the highest military order awarded for valor in the face of the enemy in various Commonwealth countries. He served in the Drill War, World War I and World War II. He was shot in the face, head, abdomen, ankle, leg, hip and ear; was blinded in his left eye; survived two plane crashes; tunnel from the POW camp; and tore off his fingers when the doctor refused to amputate them. his experience in World War I, he wrote: Honestly, I enjoyed the war. After returning home from service (including as a prisoner of war) during World War II, he was sent to China as a personal representative of Winston Churchill. On the way, he attended the Cairo Conference. In his memoirs, De Viart wrote: Governments can think and speak as they like, but power cannot be eliminated, and this is the only real and unanswered power. We are told that the pen is stronger than the sword, but I know which of these weapons I would choose. Carton de Viart was considered a model for Brigadier Ben Ritchie-Hook's character in Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography described it this way: With its black eye and empty sleeve, De Viart's Boxes looked like an elegant pirate, and became a figure of legend. The early life of von Box de Viart was born into an aristocratic family in Brussels, May 5, 1880, the eldest son of Leon Box de Viart (1854-1915). According to contemporaries, he was the illegitimate son of King Leopold II of Belgium. The death of his Irish mother when he was six prompted his father to move from the family to Cairo so that his father could practice in Egyptian mixed courts. His father was a lawyer and magistrate, as well as a director of the Cairo Electric Railways and Heliopolis Oases, and was well-connected in Egyptian government circles. Adrian Boxes de Viart learned to speak Arabic. Carton de Viart was a Catholic. In 1891, his English stepmother sent him to boarding school in England, a Roman Catholic oratorio school founded by John Henry Newman. From there he enrolled at Balliol College, Oxford, but left for the British Army during the Second Boer War around 1899, where he entered under the false name Trooper Carton, claiming to be 25 years old. His real age was no more than 20 years. The Second Drilling War Box de Viart was shot in the stomach and groin at the beginning of the Second Storm War and was declared invalid at home. His father was furious when he learned that his son had dropped out, but allowed his son to remain in the army. After another short period at Oxford, where Aubrey Herbert was among his friends, he received a commission in the Second Imperial Light Horse. He saw the action again in South Africa, and on September 14, 1901, received a regular commission as a second lieutenant in the 4th Dragoon Guard. In 1902, The Cardboard de Viart was transferred to India. He loved sports, especially shooting and pig. Character, interests and life in the serious wound of the Edwardian army Of De Viart in the Boer War instilled in him a strong desire for physical fitness, and he fled, jogged, walked and played sports on Basis. In men's company, he was an amazing character and must hold a world record for bad language. After his regiment was transferred to South Africa on 16 July 1904, he was promoted to Senior Lieutenant and appointed Assistant Commander-in-Chief Sir Henry Hildiard in July of the following year. He describes this period until 1914 as his Heyday, the title of Chapter 3 of his autobiography. His easy duties as an assistant de camp gave him time for polo, another of his interests. By 1907, although Carton de Viart had served in the British Army for eight years, he remained a Belgian entity. On 13 September of the same year, he took an oath of allegiance to Edward VII and was officially naturalized as a British entity. Carton de Viart was well connected in European circles, his two closest relatives were Count Henri Boxa de Viart, Prime Minister of Belgium from 1920 to 1921, and Baron Edmond Carton de Viart, Political Secretary of the King of Belgium and Director of La Soci't Generale de Berk. While on vacation, he traveled extensively in Central Europe, using his Catholic aristocratic connections to film on country estates in the Czech Republic, Austria, Hungary and Bavaria. Upon his return to England, he met, among other things, the future Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson and the future Air Marshal Sir Edward Leonard Ellington. On February 26, 1910, he was promoted to captain. The Duke of Beaufort was an honorary colonel in the Royal Hussars of Gloucestershire, and from 1 January 1912 until his departure to Somaliland in 1914, Carton de Viart served as an adjutant of the regiment. In 1908, he married the Countess of Friderica Maria Carolina Henrietta Rosa Sabine Francisco Fugger von Babenhausen (1887 Klagenfurt - 1949 Vienna), the eldest daughter of Karl, 5th Furst (Prince) von Fugger-Babenhausen and Princess Eleanor zuenlo-Bartenstein of Clagenfur, Austria. They had two daughters, the eldest of whom Anita (born in 1909, died) was the grandmother of war correspondent Anthony Loyd (born 1966). The First World War Somaliland campaign When the First World War broke out, Carton de Wart was on its way to British Somaliland, where a low level of war was waged against followers of Mohammed bin Abdullah, called the Mad Mullah by the British. De Wart's boxes were attached to the Somaliland camel enclosure. The officer of the corps headquarters was Hastings Ismay, later Lord Ismay, Churchill's military adviser. During the attack on the enemy fort in Symber Burris, Boxes de Viart was shot twice in the face, losing his eyes as well as part of his ear. On May 15, 1915 he was awarded the Order of Distinguished Service (DSO). In February 1915, on the Western Front, he sailed on a steamer to France. Boxes de Viart took part in the fighting on the Western Front, commanding successive three infantry battalions and brigades. He was wounded seven more times in the war, losing his left arm in 1915 and taking off his fingers when the doctor refused to remove them. He was wounded through his skull and ankle in the Battle of the Somma, through his hip at the Battle of Passchendaele, through his leg in Cambrai and through his ear in Arras. He went to Sir Douglas Shield's nursing home to recover from his injuries. In March 1916, Carton de Viart was promoted to interim major. He was subsequently promoted to interim lieutenant colonel on 18 July, promoted to major on 12 January 1917 and promoted to interim brigadier general on 12 January 1917. In April 1917, he was appointed an officer of the Belgian Crown Order. On June 3, 1917, Carton de Viart was overthooped by a lieutenant colonel. On July 18, he was promoted to the rank of Major Dragoon Guard. In March 1918 he was awarded the Belgian Croix de Guerre, and in June he was appointed an associate of the Order of St. Michael and St. George on the list of honorary guests of the King's birthday. Three days before the end of the war, on November 8, Carton de Viart was commanded by a brigade with the rank of interim brigadier general.
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