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Jona von Ustinov

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Jona "Klop" von Ustinov
Born2 December 1892
Died1 December 1962(1962-12-01)(aged 69)
NationalityGerman
Alma materGrenoble University,
University of Berlin
Occupation(s)Journalist, diplomat
SpouseNadezhda L. Benois (1920–1962; his death)
ChildrenPeter Ustinov
Parent(s)Plato von Ustinov
Magdalena Hall
RelativesTamara Ustinov(granddaughter)

Jona Freiherr[a]von Ustinov(Russian:Иона Платонович Устинов,romanized:Iona Platonovich Ustinov;2 December 1892 – 1 December 1962), often known asKlop Ustinov(Клоп Устинов), was a German journalist and diplomat who worked forMI5during the time of theNazi regime.His father was the Russian-born emigre BaronPlato von Ustinov(1840–1918). His son was the actor SirPeter Ustinov.

Early life

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Ustinov was born JonahFreiherrvon Ustinow inJaffa,Palestine,then part of theOttoman Empire,the son ofPlato von Ustinov,a former Russian officer and naturalised citizen of theKingdom of Württembergwho had married Magdalena Hall, then living in Jaffa, the daughter of the Ethiopiancourt ladyKatharina Hall, also known as Welette-Iyesus and her husband,Moritz Hall,a Jewish-born convert to Protestantism, cannon-casterofTewodros II of Ethiopiaand missionary ofSt. Chrischona Pilgrim Mission[de]inEthiopia,and later in Jaffa.[1][2][3][4][5]Magdalena and Plato von Ustinov (sometimes transcribed as "Ustinow" ) had five children, of whom Jona/Jonah was the eldest.[6]

There is a family photograph that shows Magdalena von Ustinov (née Hall) with her husband and their children, including Jona/Jonah, who disliked his forename so much that he chose the nickname "Klop" ( "Bedbug" in Russian) by which he was known to his friends and relatives for the rest of his life.[citation needed]

Ustinov went to school inJaffa,where until 1900 his father hosted the school of the ProtestantImmanuel congregationin hisHôtel du Parc,later inDüsseldorf,andYverdon.He studied atGrenoble University,in France, and worked at theUniversity of Berlinbefore he moved to London. That peripatetic life engendered in Ustinov a cosmopolitan attitude, which made him averse to any kind of nationalism.[citation needed]

Early career

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DuringWorld War I,Ustinov served in the German Army'sAir ServiceunitFlieger-Abteilung (Artillerie) 250.[7][8]He was awarded theWürttembergianMilitary Merit Orderfor his services.[9]His brother Peter von Ustinow joined the same unit and was killed in action on 13 July 1917.[10]After the war Ustinov worked forWolffs Telegraphisches Bureau,the first German news agency, inAmsterdam.

On 17 July 1920, he married the painterNadia Benois,daughter ofLeon Benois.The Ustinovs returned to London, where Klop became a press officer for the German Embassy. Their sonPeter Ustinovwas born on 16 April 1921.

His political opinions gave difficulties to Ustinov with the new Nazi government almost immediately. In 1935, the conflict culminated when Ustinov refused to prove that he was not of Jewish descent ( "Ariernachweis"). As a result, he lost his job and chose to become aBritish citizen,which allowed him to avoid internment and later, during the war, deportation.[11]

Later career

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Stolperstein(stumbling block), Jona von Ustinow, Wilhelmstraße 92, Berlin-Mitte, Germany

Meanwhile, he had begun working for the British intelligence serviceMI5,[12][13][14][15][16][17][18]and hosted secret meetings of senior British officials and German generals at his home on the fourth floor of 34Redcliffe Gardens,Kensington,London.[19][20][21]Notable among these guests were the diplomatRobert VansittartandWinston Churchill(then out of power). Another wasWolfgang zu Putlitz,a First Secretary of the German Embassy in London who provided detailed information aboutGerman rearmament.Former MI5 officerPeter Wrightsaid it was "priceless intelligence, possibly the most important human-source intelligence Britain received in the prewar period".[22][17]

He also tried to convince the British government to adopt a more robust attitude towards Nazi Germany. Seven months before theoccupation of Czechoslovakiain 1939, he was able to acquire the German plans. He later regretted that Prime MinisterNeville Chamberlaincould not bring himself to take any action.[citation needed]

Death

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Ustinov died on 1 December 1962 inEastleach,Gloucestershire from a massive heart attack.[23][24][25][26]It was the day before his 70th birthday.[27]Administration of his estate was given to his wife, Nadia,[28]on 7 May 1963 – his effects were valued at £1,196.[29]

Peter Wright,author ofSpycatcher,said that Ustinov was discovered by another member of the British intelligence community a short time before his death, selling books from his library to supplement his income.[30]According to Wright, Ustinov's pension had been overlooked, and he was almost penniless.[30]Wright states that someone from MI5 did attempt to rectify the situation, but that Ustinov died a short time later and he (Wright) did not know whether or not the problem was corrected.[30]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Regarding personal names:Freiherrwas a title before 1919, but now is regarded as part of the surname. It is translated asBaron.Before the August 1919 abolition of nobility as a legal class, titles preceded the full name when given (Graf Helmuth James von Moltke). Since 1919, these titles, along with any nobiliary prefix (von,zu,etc.), can be used, but are regarded as a dependent part of the surname, and thus come after any given names (Helmuth James Graf von Moltke). Titles and all dependent parts of surnames are ignored in Alpha betical sorting. The feminine forms areFreifrauandFreiin.
    The German title ofFreiherr( "baron" ), worn by Jona, was never validated in Russia.

References

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  1. ^"The Ethiopian Nero".[Re]collection.
  2. ^"Portrait Archiv ZGF Jona Ustinov-Benois Freiherr Eastleach".
  3. ^"Jona von Ustinov".
  4. ^Jona Ustinovat ancestry
  5. ^Smidt (2005).
  6. ^Cf. Holtz (2005).
  7. ^"Ustinov".theaerodrome.
  8. ^"Fliegerabteilung 250 (Artillerie)".frontflieger.de.
  9. ^Cf."Jona von Ustinow", in:Frontflieger.
  10. ^"Lt Peter Von Ustinov KIA 1917".theaerodrome.
  11. ^Enigma 2000 Newsletter
  12. ^"L'Agent U35 n'était autre que Klop Ustinov, père du célèbre acteur".Le Temps.7 April 2017.
  13. ^"Klop review: Peter Day brings the flamboyant spy brilliantly to life".25 July 2014.
  14. ^"Klop".bitebackpublishing.
  15. ^MacIntyre, Ben(2014).A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal.Crown.ISBN9780804136648.
  16. ^Guy Liddell#Wartime diaries
  17. ^abDay (2014).
  18. ^Andrew (2009).
  19. ^"34 Redcliffe Gardens · 34 Redcliffe Gardens, London SW10 9HA, UK".
  20. ^"OrnaVerum - when history held its breath".
  21. ^"BBC One - Parkinson, Peter Ustinov".
  22. ^Wright (1987), p. 87.
  23. ^"Jona von Ustinov".Spartacus Educational Publishers.
  24. ^"Jona von Ustinov - A special character of the village of Eastleach".eastleach.org.Archivedfrom the original on 15 July 2020.
  25. ^"The Ustinov Family | Peter Ustinov Stiftung".
  26. ^"La vie d'espion du père de Peter Ustinov".Tribune de Genève.
  27. ^Death registered (as Iona Ustinow) in the Cirencester Registration District in the fourth quarter of 1962.
  28. ^Lahr, John (25 September 1977)."Ustinov's Many Lives".The New York Times.
  29. ^Principal Probate Registry,Wills and Administrations(1963), p. 522.
  30. ^abcWright (1987), p.67-70.

Bibliography

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  • Nadia Benois,Klop and the Ustinov Family(1973)

Sources

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  • Peter Ustinov,Dear Me,1977 Pavor S. A.
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