Baron Jules Adolphe de Kœnigswarter (alsoKönigswarter) (7 March 1904 – 15 February 1995), was a French soldier and diplomat of Jewish descent.[1]
Early life
Koenigswarter was born on 7 March 1904 at 22 Rue Galilée in Paris into a large and prominent Königswarter family.[2] He was the son of French banker Baron Louis de Koenigswarter (1870–1931) and Jeanne Thècle (née Kauffmann) de Koenigswarter.[3][4] His younger sister, Marguerite de Koenigswarter, was married to André Gustave Bicart-Sée.[5]
After the war, he entered the French diplomatic service, first settling with his wife and children in Norway and then in Mexico City (where he was counselor of the French Embassy),[12] before coming to the United States in 1953 as agent general of the French government tourist office in North America.[13] They separated in 1951 and, from 1953 to 1957, he held the position of French Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States and to Canada.[3] In 1957, he became the French Ambassador to Indonesia,[14] followed by the Ambassador to Peru from 1961 to 1966.[15][16]
Koenigswarter later returned to Paris and a position in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Upon his retirement, he moved to Spain where he died in 1995.[15]
Personal life
On 20 October 1930, Koenigswarter was married to Nadine Lise Raphäel (1911–1932), a daughter of Jenny (née Cahn) Raphäel and Maurice Raphäel, a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur. Through her aunt Flora Raphäel, (the wife of banker David David-Weill, who was chairman of Lazard Frères), she was a first cousin of Pierre David-Weill and Jean David-Weill. They were the parents of one child before Nadine died on 13 May 1932, just twenty years old.[17]
Baron Patrick de Koenigswarter (1936–2017), a businessman and photographer who married socialite Eva Abesamis and lived in the Philippines,[22] where he became a friend and collector of Benedicto Cabrera.[14][23]
Janka de Koenigswarter (b. 1938), who became the mother of Steven de Koenigswarter.[24]
Jules and Nica separated in 1951 and after saxophonist Charlie Parker died at her apartment in the Stanhope Hotel in 1955, Koenigswarter filed for divorce, which was granted in 1956 along with custody of their three minor children. Nica continued to live on her own in New York City, where she was a patroness of the Bebopjazz community.[25]
On 15 March 1956, Baron de Koenigswarter was married to Madeleine Adrienne Emma Le Forestier in New York City. His second wife died in 1988.[26] Baron de Koenigswarter died on 15 February 1995 in Málaga, Spain.[27]