William Edward David Allen


William Edward David "Bill" Allen was a British scholar, Foreign Service officer, politician and businessman, best known as a historian of the South Caucasus—notably Georgia. He was closely involved in the politics of Northern Ireland, and had fascist tendencies.

Career

Born into, on his father's side, an Ulster-Scots family in London and brought up in Hertfordshire, he was educated at Eton College, where he began to learn Russian and Turkish. He published his first book, The Turks in Europe, when he was eighteen. He was a special correspondent for the Morning Post during the Greco-Turkish War and the Rif War.
In the pre-Second World War years, he travelled a lot and conducted extensive research on the history of the peoples of the Caucasus and Anatolia. In 1930, along with Sir Oliver Wardrop, he founded the Georgian Historical Society; the Society published its own journal, Georgica, dedicated to Kartvelian studies.
His mother financed his personal enterprises until around 1935, and also provided a home at Commonwood House, Chipperfield, Hertfordshire, where he and his brothers could bring their guests at weekends: in Allen's case, he wrote later, these would include 'bizarre intellectuals, Caucasian philologists and exiled national leaders from the remoter parts of Central Asia'.
In 1940–1, he accompanied Orde Wingate on his mission to Abyssinia, and wrote a book of his experiences called Guerrilla War in Abyssinia. On 6 March 1941 the Italian division won a victory; what they did know was that a much smaller force opposed them. Wingate set out to fool them in a game of deception: Allen remarked "Perhaps God fights on the side of great hearts and not of the big battalions." The tactic of surprise attacks behind unnerved the garrison at Debra Markos which scarpered in some disorder. He also met and recorded the activities of other Special Operations Executive comrades Tony Simonds and Billy Maclean remarkable for their informality and eccentricities as their soldierly demeanour.
He wrote with Paul Muratoff two volumes on the Russian campaign for Penguin Books. John Erickson wrote that they are examples of skilful exploitation of contemporary sources, and even today retain considerable value, including the elucidation of terrain factors.
Allen was an officer with His Majesty's Diplomatic Service from 1943—notably information counsellor at Ankara between 1947 and 1949—until he stepped down and returned to his native Ulster in 1949. There, while living near Killyleagh, County Down, he divided his working time between running the family business and writing the two major books which he completed during the 1950s: Caucasian Battlefields, and David Allens. His last book, Russian Embassies to the Georgian Kings , written with the help of the translator Anthony Mango, was published in two volumes by the Hakluyt Society in 1970. He spent his last years living at Whitechurch House, near Cappagh in County Waterford, in the south-east of Ireland.
After his death in Dublin in 1973, his extensive library of books on Georgia and the Caucasus was estimated at £30,000. This library is now part of the Indiana University's Lilly Library, which describes it as being 'rich in travel narratives, chronicles and works in linguistics, and a number of books and some manuscripts in the Georgian language'.

Political career and fascism

Allen stood unsuccessfully in Fermanagh and Tyrone at the 1922 general election, but was elected seven years later on his next attempt, at the 1929 general election as the Unionist Member of Parliament for Belfast West.
He defected from the Unionists in 1931, to join Sir Oswald Mosley's New Party, but did not contest the 1931 general election. He was a close friend of Mosley helping him to pursue his fascist ambitions from behind the scenes, by supporting him financially and by contributing mainly anonymous articles to The Blackshirt, including "The Letters of Lucifer". Allen also wrote BUF, Oswald Mosley and British Fascism under the pen name of "James Drennan".
It was believed that assertions he was an MI5 informant were false however documents now available in the National Archive confirm that he was interviewed by MI5 and gave over information regarding the BUF's funding from Fascist Italy.

Personal life

He was married: from 1922 to 1932, to Lady Phyllis Edith King, the daughter of Lionel Fortescue King, 3rd Earl of Lovelace ; from 1932 to 1939, to Paula Gellibrand, once one of Cecil Beaton's favourite models, formerly the wife of the Marquis de Casa Maury and formerly the wife of Ivan Wilkie Brooks; and from 1943, to Nathalie Maximovna.

Main works