Background
He was born in India, the son of Hugh Shakespear Barnes and his wife Winifred Strachey, daughter of Sir John Strachey.
He was born in India, the son of Hugh Shakespear Barnes and his wife Winifred Strachey, daughter of Sir John Strachey.
Brought up in Florence by his Strachey grandparents, he was educated at Street Aubyns School Eton College and King"s College, Cambridge.
He became a Roman Catholic convert in 1914. Barnes served in the Guards and Royal Flying Corps during World War I. He then worked in the Foreign Office Intelligence department, to 1919. Subsequently he lived in Italy, disliking British life as he found lieutenant
Barnes became the leader of the Centre International des Études Fascistes (CINEF) in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Other British founders were Edmund Garratt Gardner and Walter Starkie. George Clarke, 1st Baron Sydenham of Combe and Arnold Leese were members.
Barnes became foreign editor of the periodical Social Justice. During World World War II Barnes worked to publicise Fascist Italy.
After the war he lived in Italy.
Strachey"s The Universal Aspects of Fascism was published in CINEF"s journal, along with articles by Edmundo Rossoni, Augusto Turati and Gioacchino Volpe. His own Fascist views included palingenesis, anti-Semitism, and opposition to liberalism.
He was a member of the Partito Nazionale Fascista, and a friend of Benito Mussolini.