Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

 

Patrick Leigh Fermor

Sir Patrick Michael Leigh Fermor, known as 'Paddy', (born 11 February 1915, London) is a British author, scholar and soldier, who played a prominent role behind the lines in the Battle of Crete during World War II. He is famous in the genre of travel literature.

Leigh Fermor's father, Sir Lewis, was a distinguished geologist. Shortly after his birth, his mother left to join his father in India, leaving him behind with another family. As a child, Leigh Fermor had problems with academic structure and limitations. As a result, he was sent to a school for difficult children. He was thrown out of his school, King's School, Canterbury, for holding hands with a local greengrocer's daughter. He carried on educating himself, reading texts on Greek, Latin, Shakespeare and History with the plan for him to get into Sandhurst, the Military Academy. He soon decided, however, at just 18, to walk the length of Europe, from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople, now Istanbul.

Patrick had set off on 8 December 1933, when Hitler had recently come to power in Germany, with a few clothes, the Oxford Book of English Verse and a volume of Horace's odes. He slept in barns and with shepherds, but also in the country houses of Central Europe with the landed gentry and aristocracy. All along the journey he listened to the many stories and dialects he came across. Two of his travel books, A Time of Gifts and Between the Woods and the Water, detail this journey and, as they were written decades later, benefit from his scholarly learning, giving a wealth of historical, geographical, linguistic and anthropological information as the narrative proceeds.

He arrived in Constantinople on 1 January, 1935 then continued on to travel around Greece. He was involved in a royalist campaign in Macedonia against republicans. He fell in love with Greece and its language. In Athens, he met Balasha Cantacuzène , a Romanian noblewoman, who he fell in love with. They shared an old watermill outside the city looking out towards Poros, where she painted and he wrote. They then moved on to Baleni, the Cantacuzène house in Moldavia, where Leigh Fermor was when World War II was declared.

He joined the Irish Guards, but due to his knowledge of Greek he was commissioned into the Intelligence Corps and became a liaison officer in Albania and fought in Greece and Crete. During the German occupation he returned to Crete three times, once by parachute. He was one of a small number of Special Operations Executive officers posted to organise the island's resistance to German occupation. Disguised as a shepherd, he lived for over two years in the mountains and led the party that captured and evacuated the German Commander, General Kreipe in 1944. The episode was immortalised in the book and later film, Ill Met by Moonlight in which Leigh Fermor was portrayed by Dirk Bogarde. He was awarded the DSO, was made Honorary Citizen of Heraklion and later of Kardamyli and Gytheio.

In 1950, Leigh Fermor's first book, The Traveller's Tree was published about his post-war travels in the Caribbean. The book won the Heinemann Foundation Prize for Literature and firmly placed him on the map. He went on to write several further books of his journeys, including Mani and Roumeli of his travels on mule and foot around remote parts of Greece. Many critics and discerning readers of travel books regard his 1977 A Time of Gifts as one the very greatest travel books in the English language. He also wrote a novel, The Violins of Saint-Jacques, which was turned into an opera by Malcolm Williamson.

After many years together, Leigh Fermor was married in 1968 to the Hon. Joan Elizabeth Rayner, née Eyres Monsell, daughter of Viscount Monsell, who accompanied him on many of his travels until her death in Kardamyli in June 2003 aged 91. They lived part of the year in their house in an olive grove in the Mani Peninsula, southern Peloponnese, and part of the year in Worcestershire.

Patrick Leigh Fermor was knighted in February 2004.

Books

  • The Traveller's Tree (1950)
  • The Violins of Saint-Jacques (1953)
  • A Time to Keep Silence (1957)
  • Mani - Travels in the Southern Peloponnese (1958)
  • Roumeli (1966)
  • A Time of Gifts (1977)
  • Between the Woods and the Water (1986)
  • Three Letters from the Andes (1991)
  • Words of Mercury (2003) edited by Artemis Cooper

External links

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy