Godfrey Lias
Arthur Godfrey Lias was a British journalist and author, primarily of historical works, as well as a teacher and military officer.
Early life
Lias was born in Cambridge, the son of clergyman John James Lias and his first wife, Edith Susan Attenborough. His father was Chancellor of Llandaff Cathedral in Wales, and Hulsean Lecturer in Divinity and Lady Margaret Preacher at the University of Cambridge. His mother died a week after his birth and his father remarried in 1890.Career
During the first World War, Lias was Captain and Adjutant, 11th Battalion Duke of Wellington's Regiment and Instructor at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. At the outbreak of the Second World War, he joined the Foreign Office News Department. Later, he was British representative on the Inter-Allied Information Committee, the official publicity organ of the Ministries of Information of the Allied Governments in London. In 1944, he joined the Political Intelligence Department of the Foreign Office as Director of the Czechoslovak Region.At one time, Godfrey Lias was an Assistant Master at Victoria College, Alexandria, Egypt, and then Head-master at the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India.
He took the History Tripos at King's College, Cambridge, and in the period between WWI and WWII was diplomatic correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, for which time he was awarded an OBE for political and public services.
He was Correspondent of The Times, The Economist and Christian Science Monitor in Prague, from August 1945 until he was expelled by the communists in July 1949, then in Vienna until June 1953, when he returned to England.