Diplomatic Gifts

A History in Fifty Presents

Diplomatic Gifts
Paul Brummell
RRP:
NZ$ 67.99
Our Price:
NZ$ 56.09
Hardback
h234 x 156mm - 376pg
27 Jan 2022 UK
International import eta 7-19 days
9781787386457
Out Of Stock
Currently no stock in-store, stock is sourced to your order
The giving of gifts has been associated with diplomacy from ancient times to the present. Press coverage tends to focus on examples which highlight cultural differences between giver; where a gift is perceived as excessive, sometimes with connotations of bribery; or where the gift poses particular challenges. The latter is exemplified by a gift in Mali of a camel to French President Francois Hollande in 2013, where the international media gleefully reported that the unfortunate creature had ended up in a tajine. Using the examples of fifty diplomatic gifts through the ages, Brummell explains how the art of diplomatic gift giving is a highly complex affair, based around objectives set by the giver, though rarely so duplicitously as in the case of perhaps the most famous diplomatic gift of all, the Trojan Horse. Another example is the use of Sevres porcelain by Kings Louis XV and XVI of France and of the favouring of Faberge for diplomatic gifts from the Russian Royal Family in promoting the fame and success of these ' brands' . The choice of diplomatic gift is usually accompanied by some attempt to understand the character and interests of the recipient, to identify a gift which will be particularly welcome. The gifting by Adolf Hitler of the remains of Napoleon II to France in 1940 was in part an attempt to help shore up the legitimacy of the Vichy regime. In some cases the influence of the receiver on the choice of gift is greater, extending to the recipient making clear the nature of the gift desired. An early example of around 1350BC from the Amarna Letters involves a communication from Hittite Prince Zita to the Egyptian Pharaoh, offering a gift of sixteen men and hinting rather heavily that he would like some gold in return. The gifting of Cleopatra' s Needle to the United Kingdom from the Ottoman Governor of Egypt is also discussed in this context.
' We' ve all wrestled with the problem of what to give someone who has everything. In this book, my dear friend Paul illustrates how diplomatic gifts are intended to send subtle or sometimes not-so-subtle messages of power, friendship and, of course, diplomacy. A wonderful gift to all who enjoy exploring history, presented in a highly entertaining and informative way. ' -- Baroness Floella Benjamin, actress, writer, presenter, and Chair of the Windrush Commemoration Committee ' Enchanting. A delight from beginning to end, as funny as it is perceptive. Brummell shows that the best gifts are imaginative, memorable and personalised but, above all, inanimate: animals-from the Trojan Horse to Maksat the Turkmen stallion-spell trouble for the recipient. Read and enjoy. ' -- Lord Simon McDonald, former Permanent Under-Secretary and Head of the Diplomatic Service at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office ' This engaging, impressively researched book shows how objects can help us understand the people and the emotions that drove diplomatic exchanges in the past-and still drive them today. An insightful and deeply enjoyable work. ' -- Zoltan Biedermann, Professor of Early Modern History, University College London, and co-editor of Global Gifts: the Material Culture of Diplomacy in Early Modern Eurasia ' A gem of a book. Easy reading. Witty. A brilliantly told collection of fifty short stories that together reveal the complex history of global diplomacy. ' -- Stevie Spring, CBE, Chairman, British Council
Paul Brummell is a British career diplomat, and currently the UK Ambassador to Latvia. His previous postings as ambassador were to Romania; Turkmenistan; and Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. He has also served as the UK' s high commissioner to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean.

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