Sir Anthony Lambert KCMG (7 March 1911 – 28 April 2007) was a British diplomat who was UK envoy to Bulgaria, Tunisia, Finland and Portugal.
Sir Anthony was described by The Telegraph as one of the last diplomats to take seriously the freedom of his Sovereign's commission "to do and perform all proper acts, matters and things which may be desirable or necessary for the promotion of relations of friendship, good understanding and harmonious intercourse between Our Realm and ..." rather than merely convey messages to and from London.
[1]Anthony Edward Lambert was educated at Harrow School and went with a scholarship to Balliol College, Oxford.
He joined the Foreign Office in 1934 and served first in Brussels, then during World War II in Ankara (where his ambassador Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen was spied on by his Albanian valet Elyesa Bazna, codenamed Cicero by the Germans), then Beirut where he was involved in General Sir Louis Spears' campaign to counter French influence, then after the Allied invasion of Europe in 1944 he was posted to Brussels again and later to Stockholm and to Athens where during travels around the country he compiled a checklist of the birds of Greece which became a standard work of reference.
[2] Lambert was Minister to Bulgaria 1958–60,[3] where he instigated the first production of a British Opera in Sofia by spending his cultural budget on records of Peter Grimes which he left on a table at a party for opera enthusiasts: after the party the records were gone and the local opera company subsequently staged Peter Grimes with sets by Osbert Lancaster who was a friend of Mr and Mrs Lambert.