Showing posts with label Ambassadorial Etiquette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ambassadorial Etiquette. Show all posts

Saturday, March 2, 2024

Etiquette Broken by Ambassador


“The etiquette of diplomacy has it that an Ambassador, even one from a republic, who hangs about a throne thereby acquires a sort of obligation to observe the etiquette of the throne. When Bismark wrote his memoirs, even that man of blood and iron wrote only of Kingly persons who were dead; etiquette forbade him even discussing the relations he had with living royalties. It is this rule that Gerard is breaking all to pieces.” Kaiser Wilhelm II was the last German Emperor and King of Prussia, from 1888 until his abdication in 1918. This marked the end of the German Empire and the 300-year reign of the House of Hohenzollern in Prussia, along with the end of the 500-year reign in Brandenburg.– Public domain image of Ambassador James W. Gerard, Ambassador to Germany from 1913 to 1917


Gerard’s Story Will Stir London


(Special Correspondence) LONDON, July 28.- Official London is "shocked." It is not the first time London has been shocked by American ways of doing things, and probably will not be the last. The thing which has caused this particular shock is the announcement of the publication of the memoirs of Ambassador Gerard, who but a few weeks ago was President Wilson's personal representative at the court of Berlin. This story will run in the Los Angeles "Examiner" beginning August 5.

It appears that there is a divinity which doth hedge a King– or a Kaiser – for which Ambassador Gerard, like other Americans, care not one straw. The etiquette of diplomacy has it that an Ambassador, even one from a republic, who hangs about a throne thereby acquires a sort of obligation to observe the etiquette of the throne. When Bismark wrote his memoirs, even that man of blood and iron wrote only of Kingly persons who were dead; etiquette forbade him even discussing the relations he had with living royalties. It is this rule that Gerard is breaking all to pieces. 

Just back from Berlin, only a few days out of the diplomatic service, he is proceeding to tell his fellow citizens in good plain American language just what he said to the Kaiser and just what the Kaiser said to him, and how the German secret-service tried to search his. papers while the German Foreign Office was trying to divert his attention by telling him how much they loved America; and how he introduced the good American phrase, "Until hell freezes over," into the German language, and a lot of similar things.

The point is that Mr. Gerard ought to wait until the Kaiser is dead. Eng- land has no love for the Kaiser, and would just as lieve that the Kaiser play he is dead, but England has a KING and a court, and etiquette is etiquette. In the meantime, the American public will undoubtedly be looking for every installment of Gerard's story, and reading it with eager interest, as it appears as a serial in the leading daily papers of all parts of the United States. – Ventura Free Press, 1917


🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Friday, May 26, 2023

Old Italian and German Royal Etiquette

 The King only speaks Italian and French, so the conversation is generally in those two languages. French, of course, is supposed to be a universal language.”  – Photo of Quirinal Palace in Italy taken by Wolfgang Moroder.

The dinners at the Quirinal Palace in Italy are far more simple as to etiquette than that of England. The same formality is observed in the entrance of the King and Queen, but the conversation is more general and the Queen does not wear her gloves. She converses in English fluently. The King only speaks Italian and French, so the conversation is generally in those two languages. French, of course, is supposed to be a universal language.
 
The dinners of Germany are not long, but they are formal and tedious, and the cooking does not commend itself to all tastes. The perfection of a dinner is found in London, generally at the house of Ambassadors, who combine the Excellencies of all nations with the follies of none. After asking the consent of the ladies present, the Italian and Turkish embassies allow the smoking of cigarettes between the salad and dessert. This fashion prevails in France and Russia, ladies smoking quite freely as men. – Harpers Bazaar, 1887

 🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Etiquette and Ambassadorial Skills


Isaac Wayne MacVeagh was an American politician and diplomat. He was the Ambassador to Italy from March 1894 to March 1897, when King Humberto I reigned. The best Ambassadors keep abreast of not only a country’s current events, but the preferences and pleasures of its Monarch, Prime Minister or President. Following news feeds would have given Ambassador MacVeagh the following news nugget – “King Humberto of Italy has so great an affection for custards, and very sweet ones at that, that he will get up in the night to partake of one. To vary the custard eaten by ordinary mortals, however, this Royal personage has his flavored with tea.”

Ambassador MacVeagh
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King Humberto Gives Him a Cordial Welcome 

Rome, March 11– The Honorable Wayne MacVeagh, Ambassador to Italy, was given a cordial welcome and an audience this afternoon by King Humberto. In conformity with Italian court etiquette, no speeches were delivered. Mr. MacVeagh and his party returned to the Grand Hotel in the state carriages. Every ceremony due the high rank of the American Ambassador was paid to him. – Los Angeles Herald, 1894

Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia