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The last ambassador

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Estonian ambassador August Torma had a protracted and unconventional relationship with the British Foreign Office. Appointed to the Court of St James’s in 1934, Torma lost his government in 1940 wh...
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  • 01 January 2011
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Estonian ambassador August Torma had a protracted and unconventional relationship with the British Foreign Office. Appointed to the Court of St James’s in 1934, Torma lost his government in 1940 when the Soviet Union overran his country, but continued to live at the legation in London and visit the Foreign Office. Gradually, however, his diplomatic standing was eroded because of Soviet demands. For Torma there was the very real fear that Britain might recognise the Soviet occupation of his homeland and he continued to reiterate his faith in international law in the hope that Estonia’s stolen independence would be restored one day. He died in 1971, twenty years before the country regained its lost freedom. This book is a biography of Torma who had a remarkable life: he assisted in the creation of the Estonian state in 1918–20, worked for it during the inter-war period and struggled to keep its cause alive during and after the Second World War; it is also a study of the awkward relationship between the ambassador and the Foreign Office that lasted for more than three decades.
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Price: $107.00
Pages: 252
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: On the Boundary of Two Worlds
Publication Date: 01 January 2011
ISBN: 9789042033139
Format: Paperback
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"Tina Tamman’s biography of August Torma (1885-1971) sheds welcome new light on the history of independent Estonia, as well as the long decades of Soviet domination during which Torma stayed on in London as Estonia’s “last ambassador.“ … Tammanshows great insight into the strengths and weaknesses of Torma’s personality … the book is […] generously illustrated." – in: Diplomact and Statescraft 23/3 (2012)
"A poignant portrait … I took this book on holiday with me, read it twice and thoroughly enjoyed it … a thought-provoking glimpse into a vanished world." – Edward Lucas, The Economist