Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Geoffrey Nathaniel Joseph Pyke (9 November 1893 – 21 February 1948) was an English journalist, educationalist, and inventor. Pyke came to public attention when he escaped from internment in Germany during World War I. He had travelled to Germany under a false passport, and was soon arrested and interned.

    • 21 February 1948 (aged 54), Hampstead, London, U.K.
  2. 29. Aug. 2014 · Churchill's Iceman: The True Story of Geoffrey Pyke: Genius, Fugitive, Spy – review | Biography books | The Guardian. Geoffrey Pyke with his wife, Margaret, and son, David. Biography books....

    • Lara Feigel
  3. 7. Mai 2015 · May 7, 2015. Geoffrey Pyke’s human history began with a miserable childhood and ended 54 years later when he took his own life in a boarding house outside central London. But in between, his...

    • David Hugh Smith
  4. 26. Aug. 2014 · The British inventor Geoffrey Pyke lived the kind of life normally chronicled in adventure novels. He escaped from a World War I German internment camp, built a fortune on the stock exchange...

  5. In his Times obituary he was described as one of the 20th century’s ‘most original if unrecognised figures’, an epithet which remains true today. For more, see the new biography of Pyke – Churchill’s Iceman: The True Story of Geoffrey Pyke: Genius, Fugitive, Spy out now with Penguin Random House.

  6. Geoffrey Nathaniel Pyke ( Londra, 9 novembre 1893 – Londra, 21 febbraio 1948) è stato un inventore e educatore britannico, direttore dei programmi del Combined Operation sotto la direzione di Lord Mountbatten; progettò sia una slitta automobile sia una portaerei totalmente in ghiaccio.

  7. 30. Sept. 2015 · Courtesy of the Geoffrey Pyke Archive. Who? Pyke was first a journalist, having landed a job as a foreign correspondent at the age of 20 after sneaking into wartime Germany under a false passport in 1914. But he became better known in his later capacity as an inventor – particularly for his unorthodox weapons of war.