Background
Retinger was born in Krakow, Poland (then part of Austria-Hungary), the youngest of four children. His father, Józef Stanisław Retinger, was the personal legal counsel and adviser to Count Władysław Zamoyski.
Retinger was born in Krakow, Poland (then part of Austria-Hungary), the youngest of four children. His father, Józef Stanisław Retinger, was the personal legal counsel and adviser to Count Władysław Zamoyski.
Financed by Count Zamoyski, Retinger entered the Sorbonne in 1906, and two years later became the youngest person to earn a Doctor of Philosophy there at age twenty.
When Retinger"s father died, Count Zamoyski took Józef into his household. He would later write about Conrad in his book Conrad and His Contemporaries (1943). In 1917 Retinger traveled to Mexico, where he became an unofficial political adviser to union organizer Luis Morones and President Plutarco Elías Calles.
Later, during World World War II, he advised the Prime Minister of the Polish Government in Exile, General Władysław Sikorski.
In 1944, aged 56, Retinger parachuted into occupied Poland with 2nd Lieutenant Tadeusz Chciuk-Celt, in Operation Salamander, to meet leading political figures and deliver money to the Polish underground.
He survived an unsuccessful assassination attempt by the Home Army command who mistrusted his secret mission into Poland. After the war, Retinger was exiled from Poland by the communist government.
He became a leading advocate of European unification and helped found both the European Movement and the Council of Europe.
He would eventually become the Honorary Secretary General of the European Movement. Retinger initiated the Bilderberg conferences in 1954 and was their secretary until his death by lung cancer in 1960. He is buried at North Sheen Cemetery.