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German colonial empire

The German colonial empire (German: Deutsches Kolonialreich) constituted the overseas colonies, dependencies, and territories of the German Empire. Unified in the early 1870s, the chancellor of this time period was Otto von Bismarck. Short-lived attempts at colonization by individual German states had occurred in preceding centuries, but Bismarck resisted pressure to construct a colonial empire until the Scramble for Africa in 1884. Claiming much of the remaining uncolonized areas of Africa, Germany built the third-largest colonial empire at the time, after the British and French.[2] The German colonial empire encompassed parts of several African countries, including parts of present-day Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Namibia, Cameroon, Gabon, Congo, Central African Republic, Chad, Nigeria, Togo, Ghana, as well as northeastern New Guinea, Samoa and numerous Micronesian islands.

German colonial empire
Deutsches Kolonialreich (German)
1884–1920
Flag
Coat of arms
German colonies and protectorates in 1914
StatusColonial empire
CapitalBerlin
Common languages
  • German
  • Local:

    Swahili, Rwanda-Rundi (Burundi, Rwanda, Buha kingdom in Tanzania), Arabic (East African colonies)

History 
1884
1888
1890
1899
1904
1905
1919
• Disestablished
1920
Area
191231,025,468[1] km2 (11,979,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1912
11,979,000[1]
An East African Askari soldier holding Germany's colonial flag

Germany lost control of most of its colonial empire at the beginning of the First World War in 1914, but some German forces held out in German East Africa until the end of the war. After the German defeat in World War I, Germany's colonial empire was officially dissolved with the Treaty of Versailles between the Allies and German Weimar Republic. Each colony became a League of Nations mandate under the administration, although not sovereignty, of one of the victorious powers.[3] Talk of regaining their lost colonial possessions persisted in Germany until 1943, but never became an official goal of the German government.

Origins Edit

 
Groß-Friedrichsburg, a Brandenburg colony (1683–1717) in the territory of modern Ghana

Germans had traditions of foreign sea-borne trade dating back to the Hanseatic League; German emigrants had flowed eastward in the direction of the Baltic littoral, Russia and Transylvania and westward to the Americas; and North German merchants and missionaries showed interest in overseas engagements.[4] The Hanseatic republics of Hamburg and Bremen sent traders across the globe. Their trading houses conducted themselves as successful Privatkolonisatoren [independent colonizers], concluding treaties and land purchases in Africa and the Pacific with chiefs and/or other tribal leaders. These early agreements with local entities later formed the basis for annexation treaties, diplomatic support and military protection by the German government.[5]

However, until their 1871 unification, the German states had not concentrated on the development of a navy, and this essentially had precluded German participation in earlier imperialist scrambles for remote colonial territory. Without a blue-water navy, a would-be colonial power could not reliably defend, supply or trade with overseas dependencies. The German states prior to 1870 had retained separate political structures and goals, and German foreign policy up to and including the age of Otto von Bismarck (1815–1898; in office as Prussian Foreign Minister from 1862 to 1890) concentrated on resolving the "German question" in Europe and on securing German interests on the continent.[citation needed] However, by 1891 the Germans were mostly united under Prussian rule.[6] They also sought a more clear-cut "German" state, and saw colonies as a good way to achieve that.[citation needed]

German Confederation and the Zollverein Edit

In the states of the German Confederation founded in 1815 and the Zollverein founded in 1834, there was some call from private and economic interests for the establishment of German colonies, especially in the 1840s.[7] However, governments had no such aspirations. In 1839, private interests founded the Hamburg Colonial Society [de], which sought to purchase the Chatham Islands east of New Zealand and settle German emigrants there, but Great Britain had a preexisting claim to the island. Hamburg relied on the Royal Navy for its worldwide shipping interests and therefore gave no political support to the Colonial Society.[8] The Society for the Protection of German Immigrants to Texas, established in Mainz in 1842 sought to expand the German settlements into a colony of "New Germany" (German: Neu Deutschland). About 7400 settlers were involved. The venture proved a complete failure. There was a constant lack of supplies and land and around half of the colonists died. The plan was definitively ended with the annexation of Texas by the United States in 1845.[9]

Starting in the 1850s German commercial enterprises spread into areas that would later become German colonies in West Africa, East Africa, the Samoan Islands, the unexplored north-east quarter of New Guinea with its adjacent islands, the Douala delta in Cameroon, and the mainland coast across from Zanzibar.[10]

First state-sponsored colonial venture (1857–1862) Edit

In 1857, the Austrian frigate Novara departed from Triest on the Novara Expedition, which aimed to explore and take possession of the Nicobar islands in the Indian Ocean. The Novara arrived at the Nicobars in 1858, but the Austrians did not subsequently lay claim to the islands.

 
The Thetis, one of the ships of the East Asia Squadron

The next state-sponsored attempt to acquire a colony occurred in 1859, when Prussia attempted to claim the island of Formosa (modern Taiwan). Prussia had already sought the approval of the French Emperor Napoleon III for the undertaking, since France was also seeking to acquire colonies in East Asia at that time. Since French interests focused on Vietnam, not Formosa, Prussia could seek to acquire the island. A Prussian naval expedition, which departed Germany at the end of 1859, was tasked with concluding trade treaties in Asia for Prussia and the other states of the Zollverein and with occupying Formosa. However, this task was not carried out, due to the limited strength of the expedition forces and because they did not wish to preclude a trade treaty with Qing China. In a cabinet order of 6 January 1862, the expedition's ambassador, Friedrich Albrecht zu Eulenburg was "released from carrying out the part of his task concerned with identification of overseas settlements suitable for Prussian settlement."

Despite this, one ship from the expedition, the Thetis was sent to Patagonia in South America to investigate its prospects as a colony, since the Prussian naval command in particular were interested in the establishment of a naval strong point on the South American coast. The Thetis had already reached Buenos Aires which the commander of the ship decided to return to Germany due to the exhaustion of the men after the year-long expedition and the need for repairs to the ship.[11]

Bismarck's rejection of colonization (1862–1871) Edit

 
Woermann-Linie factory in Cameroon. From the 1830s, German shipping participated in trade with Africa and established factories there. From the 1850s, trade and plantation agriculture were undertakend by German companies in the South Seas. Some of these economic enterprises eventually formed the basis for the regions' conversion into German colonies.[12]

After the Second Schleswig War in 1864, colonialist societies in Prussia aspired to take possession of the Nicobar islands which had previously been in Danish possession.[13] For its part, Denmark unsuccessfully proposed to exchange the Danish West Indies for some of the lost territory in Schleswig in 1865. In 1866 and then again in 1876, Jamal ul-Azam, Sultan of the Sulu Islands, located between Borneo and the Philippines, offered to place his islands under Prussian and then Imperial German control, but both times he was rebuffed.[14] Ahmad ibn Fumo Bakari, the Sultan of Wituland asked the Prussian traveler Richard Brenner [de] to establish a Prussian protectorate over his lands, but this request was never considered in Berlin.[15]

In the 1867 constitution of the North German Confederation, article 4.1 declared "colonization" as one of the areas under the "oversight of the Confederation", which remained the case in the Imperial constitution established in 1871.

In 1867/8, Otto von Bismarck dispatched the warship Augusta to the Caribbean to show the flag of the North German Confederation. At the personal urging of Prince Adalbert, the commander of the North German Federal Navy, and without Bismarck's knowledge, the commander of the Augusta, Franz Kinderling [de] conducted negotiations with José María Castro Madriz, President of Costa Rica with a view to establishing a naval base at Puerto Limón. Bismarck rejected the acquisition, due to the American Monroe Doctrine. This desire to avoid antagonising the United States also led him to reject a Dutch offer to establish a naval base on the Dutch island of Curaçao.[16]

In 1868, Bismarck made his opposition to any colonial acquisitions clear in a letter to the Prussian Minister of War Albrecht von Roon:[17]

On the one hand, the benefits which one might derive from colonies for the Motherland's trade and industry are mostly illusory. Then, the costs which the foundation, maintenance, and especially the establishment of claims to colonies entail very often exceed the utility which the Motherland gets from them, entirely apart from the fact that it is difficult to justify placing significant tax burdens on the whole nation for the benefit of individual commercial and industrial interests. On the other hand, is not sufficiently developed to be able to undertake the task of firmly protecting distant states.

He also repeatedly stated "... I am no man for colonies"[18]

The policy of the North German Confederation at this time focussed on the acquisition of individual naval bases, not colonies. With these it would be able to use gunboat diplomacy to protect the global trade interests of the Confederation through a kind of informal imperialism. In 1867, it was decided to establish five overseas bases. Accordingly, in 1868, land was bought in Yokohama in Japan for a German naval hospital, which remained in operation until 1911. In 1869 the "East Asian Station" (Ostasiatische Station) was established there by the navy as the first overseas base, with a permanent presence of German warships. Until the German Empire's acquisition of Qingdao in China as a military port in 1897, Yokohama remained the base of the German fleet in East Asia. It later proved useful following the acquisition of colonies in the Pacific and in Kiaochow.[19]

In 1869, the Rhenish Missionary Society, which had been established in southwestern Africa for several decades asked King William of Prussia for protection and suggested the establishment of a naval station at Walvis Bay. William was very interested in this suggestion, but the matter was forgotten following the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War.[20]

Debate and tentative steps under the new German Empire (1871–1878) Edit

 
Kladderadatsch caricature, 1884. Bismarck sits atop the globe, smoking a long pipe and reading a book entitled "Social Reforms", while personifications of Britain, France, Russia, and other nations quarrel below. The title reads "The South Seas are the Mediterranean of the Future" and the caption says "I'm fine with the others keeping themselves busy down there. Then there will finally be peace up here."

A French proposal after the Franco-Prussian War to hand over the French colony of Cochinchina instead of Alsace–Lorraine, was rejected by Bismarck and a majority of the delegates in the North German Reichstag in 1870. After German Unification in 1871, Bismarck maintained his earlier position. During the 1870s, colonialist propaganda achieved increasing public profile in Germany. In 1873, the African Society in Germany [de] was established, which considered exploration of Africa its main function. In 1878 the foundation of the Central Society for Commercial Geography and Promotion of German Interests Abroad [de] was established, which sought to acquire colonies for Germany, and in 1881 West German Society for Colonization and Export [de] was founded, which included the "acquisition of agricultural and commercial colonies for the German Empire" in its founding statute. In 1882, the first Society for German Colonization [de] was established, which was a lobby group for colonialist propaganda. In 1887, the competing Society for German Colonization was established with the goal of actually undertaking colonization. The two societies merged in 1887 into the German Colonial Society. Generally, four arguments were advanced in favor of the acquisition of colonies:[21]

  • Once developed, colonies would offer captive markets for German industrial products and thus provide a substitute for the decreasing consumer demand in Germany following the Panic of 1873.
  • Colonies would provide a space for the German diaspora, so that they would not be lost to the nation. Since the diaspora had mainly emigrated to English-speaking areas up to this point, the prominent colonialist Wilhelm Hübbe-Schleiden [de] held that if they were allowed to leave, the Anglo-Saxon race would irretrievably overtake the German one demographically.
  • Germany had, as the theologian Friedrich Fabri [de] put it, a "cultural mission" to spread its supposedly superior culture across the globe.
  • The acquisition of colonies provided a possible solution for the Social Question – workers would commit themselves to an absorbing national task and abandon social democracy. Through this and through the emigration of the overly rebellious masses to the colonies the internal unity of the nation would be strengthened.

Moreover, German public opinion in the late-19th century viewed colonial acquisitions as a true indication of having achieved full nationhood,[22] and eventually arrived at an understanding that prestigious African and Pacific colonies went hand-in-hand with dreams of a High Seas Fleet.[citation needed]

Bismarck remained opposed to these arguments and preferred an informal commercial imperialism, in which German companies carried out profitable trade with areas outside Europe and made economic inroads without the occupation of territories or the construction of states.[23] Bismarck and many deputies in the Reichstag had no interest in making colonial conquests merely to acquire square miles of territory.[24]

As a result, the first colonial enterprises abroad were extremely hesitant: a Treaty of Friendship between the German Empire and Tonga [de] was signed in 1876, which provided for the establishment of a coal station on the Tongan island of Vavaʻu, guaranteeing all usage rights of the specified area to the German Empire, but leaving the King of Tonga's sovereignty untouched.[25] No actual colonization occurred. On 16 July 1878, the commander of the SMS Ariadne, Bartholomäus von Werner [de] occupied Falealili and Saluafata on the Samoan island of Upolu "in the name of the Empire". The German occupation of these places was revoked in January 1879 with the conclusion of a treaty of friendship between the local rulers and Germany.[26] On 19 November 1878, von Werner established a treaty with the leaders of Jaluit Atoll and the Ralik islands of Lebon and Letahalin, granting privileges like the exclusive right to establish a coal station. An official German colony in the Marshall Islands was only established in 1885.[27] Von Werner also acquired a harbor on the islands of Makada and Mioko in the Duke of York Islands in December 1878, which would become a component part of the future protectorate of German New Guinea in 1884.[28] On 20 April 1879, the commander of the SMS Bismarck, Karl August Deinhard [de] and the German Consul for the South Seas Islands, Gustav Godeffroy Junior established a treaty of commerce and friendship with "the government" of Huahine, one of the Society Islands, which granted the German fleet the right to anchor at all harbors on the island, among other things.[29]

Establishment of the empire (1884–1890) Edit

 
Cartoon on Bismarck's colonial policy: "The new crinoline." The caption reads: "Must I then participate in the fashion? – Have courage, good lady! Even if you are a bit embarrassed by the novel to start with, it will give you a brilliant appearance on the outside." At left in the background, the German Centrist Ludwig Windthorst is depicted as a governess. Engraving by Gustav Heil for the satirical magazine Berliner Wespen 13 March 1885

Although Bismarck "remained as contemptuous of all colonial dreams as ever",[30] in 1884, he consented to the acquisition of colonies by the German Empire, in order to protect trade, safeguard raw materials and export-markets and to take advantage of opportunities for capital investment, among other reasons.[31] In the very next year Bismarck shed personal involvement when "he abandoned his colonial drive as suddenly and casually as he had started it" – as if he had committed an error in judgment that could confuse the substance of his more significant policies.[32] "Indeed, in 1889, [Bismarck] tried to give German South West Africa away to the British. It was, he said, a burden and an expense, and he would like to saddle someone else with it."[33]

Following 1884, Germany invaded several territories in Africa: German East Africa (including present-day Burundi, Rwanda, and the mainland part of Tanzania); German South West Africa (present-day Namibia), German Cameroon (including parts of present-day Cameroon, Gabon, Congo, Central African Republic, Chad and Nigeria); and Togoland (present-day Togo and parts of Ghana). Germany was also active in the Pacific, annexing a series of islands that would be called German New Guinea (part of present-day Papua New Guinea and several nearby island groups). The northeastern region of the island of New Guinea was called Kaiser-Wilhelmsland; the Bismarck Archipelago to the islands' east also contained two larger islands named New Mecklenburg and New Pomerania. They also acquired the Northern Solomon Islands. These islands were given the status of protectorate.[6]

Bismarck moves towards a colonial policy (1878–1883) Edit

The shift in Bismarck's policy on the acquisition of colonies began as part of his 1878 Schutzzollpolitik [de] policy on the protection of the German economy from foreign competition. The beginning of his colonial policy in connection with the Schutzzollpolitik[34] was the acquisition of Samoa, where there were significant German economic interests. In June 1879, as Imperial Chancellor, he acknowledged the "Treaty of Friendship"[35] agreed between the Samoan chiefs and the German consul in Samoa in January 1879, with the result that the consul assumed control of the administration of the city of Apia on the island of Upolu, along with the consuls of Britain and America.[36] In the 1880s, Bismarck would unsuccessfully attempt to annex Samoa several times.[37] The western Samoan islands, which included Apia, the main city, became a German colony in 1899.

In April 1880, Bismarck actively intervened in domestic politics in favor of colonial matters, when he presented the Samoa Bill to the Reichstag. It had been endorsed by the Federal Council, but was rejected by the Reichstag. The bill would have provided German financial support to a private German colonial trade company that had fallen into difficulties.

In May 1880, Bismarck asked the banker Adolph von Hansemann to produce a report on German colonial goals in the Pacific and the possibility of enforcing them. Hansemann submitted his Memorandum on Colonial Aspirations in the South Seas to Bismarck in September of the same year. The proposed territorial acquisitions were almost all taken or claimed as colonies four years later.[38] Those Pacific territories that were claimed in 1884 but not taken were finally brought under German colonial administration in 1899. Significantly, Hausemann was a founding member of the New Guinea Consortium for the acquisition of colonies in New Guinea and the Pacific in 1882.

In November 1882, the Bremen-based tobacco merchant Adolf Lüderitz contacted the Foreign Office and requested protection for a trade station south of Walvis Bay on the southwest African coast. In February and November 1883, he asked the British government whether the United Kingdom would provide protection to Lüderitz's trade station. Both times the British government refused.[39]

From March 1883, Adolph Woermann, a Hamburg bulkgoods trader, shipowner, and member of the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce, engaged in extremely confidential negotiations with the Foreign Office, which was headed by Bismarck, for the acquisition of a colony in West Africa. The reason for this was the fear of tariffs that Hamburg traders might have to pay if the whole of West Africa were to come under British or French control. Finally a secret request from the Chamber of Commerce to Bismarck for the establishment of a colony in West Africa was submitted to Bismarck on 6 July 1883, stating that "through such acquisitions, German trade in Trans-Atlantic lands could only be given a firmer position and a surer support, while without political protection trade cannot now thrive and progress."[40]

After this, in March 1883, the Sierra Leone Convention between the United Kingdom and France was published, in which the two countries' spheres of interest were laid out without consideration of other trading nations. In response the German government asked the senates of the cities of Lübeck, Bremen, and Hamburg for their opinions. In their answer, the Hamburg merchants demanded the acquisition of colonies in West Africa. In December 1883, Bismarck let Hamburg known that an Imperial commissioner would be sent to West Africa to secure the safety of German trade and to conclude a treaty with "independent Negro states". A warship, the SMS Sophie would be sent to provide military protection. Additionally, Bismarck requested suggestions on this plan and asked for Adolph Woermann's advice personally on what instructions should be given to the Imperial commissioner. In March 1884, Gustav Nachtigal was named as the Imperial Commissioner for the West African Coast and set sail for West Africa in the SMS Möwe.[41][42]

Colonization under Bismarck (1884–1888) Edit

 
Lüderitz Bay (around 1900), the first colonial acquisition of the German Empire
 
SMS Olga during the bombardment of Hickorytown (Douala), Cameroon, December 1884
 
German colonies in Africa and Papua New Guinea in 1885

The year 1884 marks the beginning of actual German colonial acquisitions, building on the overseas possessions and rights that had been acquired for the German Empire since 1876. In one year, Germany's holdings became the third-largest colonial empire, after the British and French empires. Following the British model, Bismarck placed many possessions of German merchants under the protection of the German empire. He took advantage of a period of foreign peace to begin the "colonial experiment", which he remained skeptical of. The transition to official acceptance of colonialism and to colonial government thus occurred during the last quarter of Bismarck's tenure of office.[43]

First, Adolf Lüderitz's trading post in the Bay of Angara Pequena ('Lüderitz Bay') and the surrounding hinterland ('Lüderitzland [de]') was placed under the protection of the German Empire in April 1884 as German South West Africa. In July, Togoland and Adolph Woermann's possessions in Cameroon followed, then the northeastern section of New Guinea ('Kaiser-Wilhelmsland') and the neighboring islands ('the Bismarck Archipelago'). In January 1885, the German flag was raised at Kapitaï and Koba on the west African coast. In February, imperialist and "man-of-action" Carl Peters accumulated vast tracts of land for his Society for German Colonization, "emerging from the bush with X-marks [affixed by unlettered tribal chiefs] on documents ... for some 60 thousand square miles of the Zanzibar Sultanate's mainland property."[44] which became German East Africa. Such exploratory missions required security measures that could be solved with small private, armed contingents recruited mainly in the Sudan and usually led by adventurous former military personnel of lower rank. Brutality, hanging and flogging prevailed during these land-grab expeditions under Peters' control as well as others as no-one "held a monopoly in the mistreatment of Africans",[45][46] and in April 1885, the brothers Clemens and Gustav Denhardt acquired Wituland in modern Kenya. With this, the first wave of German colonial acquisitions was largely completed.

The raising of German flags on Pacific islands claimed by Spain between August and October 1885 sparked the Carolines Crisis, in which Germany ultimately backed down.

In October 1885, the Marshall Islands were also claimed and finally several of the Solomon Islands in October 1886. In 1888, Germany ended the civil war on Nauru and annexed the island.

Causes Edit

The causes of Bismarck's sudden shift to a policy of colonial acquisition remain a matter of controversy among historians. There are two dominant schools of thought: one which focusses on German domestic politics and one which focusses on foreign affairs.

In terms of internal politics, the key aspect is the public pressure which led to the development of a "Colonial fever" (Kolonialfieber) among the German populace. Although the colonial movement was not very strong institutionally, it succeeded in bringing its position into the public debate.[47] A memorandum authored by Adolph Woermann and sent to Bismarck by the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce on 6 July 1883 is considered to have been particularly important in this respect.[48] The approach of the 1884 German federal election and Bismarck's desire to strengthen his own position and bind the National Liberal Party, which supported colonialism, to himself, have also been proposed as domestic factors in the adoption of the colonial policy.[49] Hans-Ulrich Wehler advanced the social imperialism thesis, which holds that the colonial expansion served to "divert" social tensions created by economic crisis to the foreign sphere and helped to reinforce Bismarck's authority.[50] The so-called "Crown-prince thesis" holds that Bismarck was attempting to deliberately worsen the German relationship with the United Kingdom before the anticipated succession of the "anglophile" Frederick III to the German throne in order to prevent him from instituting liberal English-style policies.[51]

In terms of foreign policy, the decision to colonize is seen as an extension of the concept of the European balance of power to a global context. Participating in the Scramble for Africa would also reinforce its position as one of the Great Powers.[52] Improving relations with France through a "colonial entente" that would divert French attention from revanchism related to Alsace-Lorraine, which had been annexed by Germany in 1871, has also been seen as a motive.[53]

Company land acquisitions and stewardship Edit

It is no longer believed that the initiation of colonial expansion represented a radical reversal of Bismarck's politics. The liberal-imperialist ideal of an overseas policy grounded in private economic initiatives, which he had held from the beginning, was not changed much by placing German merchants' possessions under the protection of the Empire.[54]

 
The Congo conference 1884/1885 in Berlin laid the basis for the Scramble for Africa, the colonial division of the continent.

As Bismarck was converted to the colonial idea by 1884, he favored "chartered company" land management rather than establishment of colonial government due to financial considerations.[55] He used official letters of protection to transfer the commerce and administration of individual "German protectorates" to private companies. The administration of these areas was assigned to the German East Africa Company (1885–1890), the German Witu Company (1887–1890), the German New Guinea Company (1885–1899), and the Jaluit-Gesellschaft [de] in the Marshall Islands (1888–1906). Bismarck would have liked the German colonies in west Africa and southwest Africa to be administered in this way as well, but neither the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft für Südwestafrika [de] nor the Syndicate for West Africa[56] were willing to take on the role.

 
Cotton transport in Togo, c. 1900. Coffee, cacao, cotton, and products from the coconut palm were pretty much the only goods produced for the German and international markets in Togo, as in the other German tropical colonies.

These areas were brought into German possession with extremely unequal treaties following demonstrations of military power. Indigenous rulers ceded vast areas, which they often had no legal claim to, in exchange for vague promises of protection and laughably low purchase prices. Details of the treaties often remained unclear to them due to the language barrier. They engaged with these deals, however, because the long negotiations with the colonizers and the ritual act of signing a treaty enormously enhanced their authority. These treaties were approved by the German government, which granted complete authority without oversight to the colonial companies, while retaining for itself only ultimate sovereignty and a few unspecified rights to intervene. In this way, state financial and administrative engagement with the colonies was kept to a minimum.[57]

However, this strategy failed within a few years. The poor financial situation of almost all of the "protectorates" as well as the precarious security situation (indigenous revolts broke out in South West Africa and East Africa in 1888, while in Cameroon and Togo border conflicts with the neighboring British colonies were feared, and in general the demands of efficient administration overwhelmed the colonial companies) compelled Bismarck and his successors to implement direct and formal rule in all the colonies.[58]

Although temperate zone cultivation flourished, the demise and often failure of tropical low-land enterprises contributed to changing Bismarck's view. He reluctantly acquiesced to pleas for help to deal with revolts and armed hostilities by often powerful rulers whose lucrative slaving activities seemed at risk. German native military forces initially engaged in dozens of punitive expeditions to apprehend and punish freedom fighters, at times with British assistance.[59] The author Charles Miller offers the theory that the Germans had the handicap of trying to colonize African areas inhabited by aggressive tribes,[60] whereas their colonial neighbors had more docile peoples to contend with. At that time, the German penchant for giving muscle priority over patience contributed to continued unrest. Several of the African colonies remained powder kegs throughout this phase (and beyond).[43]

Halt to colonial acquisitions (1888–1890) Edit

After 1885, Bismarck opposed further colonial acquisitions and maintained his policy focus on maintaining good relationships with the Great Powers of England and France. In 1888, when the journalist Eugen Wolf urged him to acquire further colonies for Germany, so that it would not fall behind in the scramble with the other Great Powers for colonies, which he understood in a social Darwinian sense, Bismarck replied that his priority was rather the protection of the recently won national unity, which he considered to be under threat due to Germany's central location:[61]

Your map of Africa is very pretty, but my map of Africa lies in Europe. Here is Russia, here is France, and we are in the middle. That is my map of Africa.

In 1889, Bismarck considered withdrawing Germany from colonial policy, wishing to entirely end Germany's activities in East Africa and Samoa, according to eyewitnesses. It was further reported that Bismarck wanted nothing more to do with the administration of the colonies and intended to hand them over to the admiralty. In May 1889, Bismarck offered to sell the German possessions in Africa to the Italian Prime Minister, Francesco Crispi – who countered with an offer to sell Italy's colonies to Germany.[62]

Bismarck also found the colonies useful as bargaining chips. Thus, at the Congo Conference held in Berlin from 1884 to 1885, he divied Africa up between the Great Powers. In 1884, a treaty was concluded in the name of Lüderitz with the Zulu king Dinuzulu, which would have given Germany a claim to St Lucia Bay in Zululand. However, the claim was dropped as part of a concession to Britain in May 1885,[63] along with a claim to Pondoland. Also in 1885, Germany waived its claim to the west African territories of Kapitaï and Koba and Mahinland, in favor of France and Britain respectively. In 1886, Germany and Britain agreed on the boundaries of their spheres of interest in East Africa.

After Bismarck had ended the policy of colonial acquisition in March 1890, he concluded the Heligoland–Zanzibar Treaty with Britain on 1 July 1890, in which Germany renounced all remaining claims north of German East Africa. In this way, he established a balance with Great Britain. Renouncing the German claims to the Somali coast between Burgabo and Alula also improved relations with Italy, one of Germany's partners in the Triple Alliance. In exchange for this, Germany acquired the Caprivi Strip, which extended German South West Africa east to the Zambezi River (it was hoped that the river would enable overland transport between German South West Africa and German East Africa). In these circumstances, further German colonial aspirations in South East Africa were brought to an end.[64]

German interest in African colonies was accompanied by a growth of scholarly interest in Africa. In 1845, the orientalist Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer of Leipzig University and others founded the Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft. The linguist Hans Stumme, also of Leipzig, researched African languages. Leipzig established a professorship of Anthropology, Ethnography, and Pre-history in 1901 (Karl Weule, who established an ethnological and biological determinist school of African research) and a professorship for "Colonial geography and colonial policy" in 1915. The researcher Hans Meyer was director of the "Institute for Colonial Geography". In 1919, the Seminar for Colonial geography and colonial policy" was established.[65]

The empire under Kaiser Wilhelm (1890–1914) Edit

Kaiser Wilhelm II (1888–1918) was keen for Germany to expand its colonial holdings. Bismarck's immediate successor in 1890, Leo von Caprivi, was willing to maintain the colonial burden of what already existed, but opposed new ventures.[66] Others who followed, especially Bernhard von Bülow, as foreign minister and chancellor, sanctioned the acquisition of further Pacific Ocean colonies and provided substantial treasury assistance to existing protectorates to employ administrators, commercial agents, surveyors, local "peacekeepers" and tax collectors. This accorded with the expansionistic policy and a forced upgrade of the Imperial German Navy. Colonial acquisition became a serious factor in German domestic politics. The German colonial society was joined in 1891 by the extremely nationalistic Pan-German League. In addition to the arguments previously made in support of colonialism, it was now argued that Germany had a duty to end the slave trade in the colonies and free indigenous people from their Muslim enslavers. These abolitionist demands, with their clear anti-Muslim bias turned the 1888 "Arab revolt" on the East African coast into a holy war.[67] Pre-eminent, however, was the matter of German national prestige and the belief that Germany was locked in a Social Darwinist competition with the other Great Powers, in which Germany as a "late-comer" had to claim her due share.[68]

Wilhelm himself lamented his nation's position as colonial followers rather than leaders. In an interview with Cecil Rhodes in March 1899 he stated the alleged dilemma clearly: "... Germany has begun her colonial enterprise very late, and was, therefore, at the disadvantage of finding all the desirable places already occupied."[69] Under the new Weltpolitik ("Global policy"), a "place in the Sun" was sought for the "latecoming nation" (as the chancellor Bernhard von Bülow put it in a speech to the Reichstag on 6 December 1897), which entailed the possession of colonies and a right to have a say in other colonial matters.[70] This policy focussed on national prestige sharply contrasted with the pragmatic colonial policy advanced by Bismarck in 1884 and 1885.

Acquisitions after 1890 Edit

 
The German leased territory of Kiautschou and the port of Qingdao

After 1890, Germany succeeded in acquiring only relatively minor territories. In 1895, concessions were acquired from Qing China in Hankau and Tientsin (modern Wuhan and Tianjin). Following the Juye Incident of 1 November 1897, in which two German missionaries from the Society of the Divine Word were murdered, Kaiser Wilhelm dispatched the East Asia Squadron to occupy Jiaozhou Bay and its chief port Qingdao on the southern coast of the Shandong peninsula.[71][dubious ] This became the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory and the area within 50 km of Jiaozhou Bay became a "Neutral Zone" in which Chinese sovereignty was limited in favor of Germany. Furthermore, Germany received mining and railway concessions in Shandong province.

 
Borders of German New Guinea before (in blue) and after (in red) the 1899 German-Spanish treaty

Through the German–Spanish Treaty of 1899, Germany acquired the Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, and Palau in Micronesia for 17 million gold marks. Through the Tripartite Convention of 1899, the west part of the Samoan islands became a German protectorate. Simultaneously, the control of existing colonies was extended inland; for example the kingdoms of Burundi and Rwanda were added to German East Africa.[72] However, from 1891, German efforts in this regard encountered sharp resistance in the Bafut Wars in Cameroon and the conflict with the Hehe in East Africa

On 6 March 1901, as part of preparatory work by the Imperial postal service for laying a German underwater telegraph cable, the colonial official Arno Senfft [de] took possession of Sonsorol island. The next day, he also claimed the islands of Merir and Pulo Anna, followed on 12 April by the island of Tobi and the Helen Reef. These islands were placed under the administration of German New Guinea.[73]

In 1900, the Imperial Navy attempted to lease the island of Langkawi from the Sultan of Kedah for fifty years through the Behn Meyer company, based in Singapore. The deal fell through when the English government intervened based on a secret 1897 treaty with Siam which gave England the right to veto any Siamese concessions to a third power, so Kedah, which was a vassal of the Bangkok government, was prevented from loaning Langkawi to the German government.[74][75] The Kaiser's attempt to acquire the Baja California peninsula from Mexico as another naval base for the German fleet in the Pacific also failed.[76]

 
  Neukamerun

During the Agadir Crisis in 1911, the German government attempted to get the whole of French Congo as compensation for German recognition of the French protectorate in Morocco. In the end they were given parts of northwestern French Congo, which were added to German Cameroon and dubbed Neukamerun. This acquisitive German colonial policy led to the increasing isolation of Germany among the Great Powers, seen in Germany as an "encirclement".[77]

For the academic development of the colonies, the Kolonialwirtschaftliches Komitee [de] was established in 1896. In 1898, the Deutsche Kolonialschule für Landwirtschaft, Handel und Gewerbe [de] was established in Witzenhausen, to provide agricultural training to people for settlement in the colonies. It is now part of the University of Kassel. In 1900, the Institute for Naval and Tropical Medicine was established in Hamburg to train naval and colonial doctors.

Of the German colonies, only Togoland and German Samoa became profitable and self-sufficient; the balance sheet for the colonies as a whole revealed a fiscal net loss for Germany.[78] Despite this, the leadership in Berlin committed the nation to the financial support, maintenance, development and defense of these possessions.

Anticolonial Resistance (1897–1905) Edit

The forcefulness with which the German colonial rulers imposed their claim to control led to ever more revolts by the indigenous population.[79] The native population was forced into unequal treaties by the German colonial governments. This led to the local tribes and natives losing their influence and power and eventually forced some of them to become slave laborers. The result was several military and genocidal campaigns by the Germans against the natives.[80] Both the colonial authorities and settlers were of the opinion that native Africans were to be a lower class, their land seized and handed over to settlers and companies, while the remaining population was to be put in reservations; the Germans planned to make a colony inhabited predominantly by whites: a "new African Germany".[81]

Since the Germans were materially and technologically superior but had only a minimal military presence, the indigenous peoples largely adopted guerrilla tactics. The German colonial forces reacted similarly to other cases of asymmetric warfare involving colonial powers: they waged war against the whole population. In a scorched earth strategy, they destroyed villages, prevented economic activity, and withheld any protection against wild animals. Through these actions, they forced the population to flee into inhospitable regions, where many starved to death. Through this conscious strategy, the Germans caused lasting changes to the whole landscape, making it uninhabitable for decades.[82]

The most significant of these actions against local populations were reprisals against the Chinese following the Boxer Rebellion in 1901–1902,[83] the Herero and Namaqua genocide in 1904–1905, and the suppression of the Maji Maji Rebellion in 1905–1907.

 
A photograph of chained Herero and Nama prisoners during the genocide
 
"Battle of Mahenge", Maji-Maji rebellion, painting by Friedrich Wilhelm Kuhnert, 1908

After the outbreak of a cattle disease in South West Africa in 1897, the Herero spread their surviving cattle out over the area of the colony. However, these new pastures had been bought by settlers, who now claimed the Herero's cattle for themselves. In 1904, the situation finally escalated into the revolt of the Herero and the Nama, which the understaffed Imperial Schutztruppe for German South West Africa were not able to quell. The German government therefore dispatched a naval expeditionary force and subsequently reinforcement Schutztruppe. In total, around 15,000 men under Lieutenant-general Lothar von Trotha defeated the Herero forces in August 1904 at the Battle of Waterberg. Von Trotha issued the so-called "extermination order" (Vernichtungsbefehl), under which the surviving Herero were driven into the wilderness. 1800 of the survivors had reached British Bechuanaland by the end of November 1904, while thousands more fled to the northernmost parts of South West Africa, and into the desert. The Herero population is estimated at 50,000, of which around half had died by 1908.[84] The Nama suffered 10,000 deaths, also around half of their population. They had fought on the German side against the Herero until the end of 1904.[85] This was the first genocide of the 20th century.[86][87][88][89]

The Maji-Maji rebellion broke out in German East Africa in 1905/6 and its suppression led to an estimated 100,000 native deaths, many from famine resulting from German scorched earth tactics.

The lack of any true war in Togoland led some in Europe to call it Germany's "model colony."[90] But it saw its own share of bloodshed. The Germans used forced labor and harsh punishment to keep the Africans in line.[90]

To minimize dissent the German Colonial Press Law (written 1906–1912) kept the pugnacious settler press under control with censorship and prohibition of unauthorized publications. However, in Togoland, African writers avoided the law by publishing critical articles in the adjacent British Gold Coast Colony. In the process they built an international network of sympathizers.[91] Exposés followed in the print media throughout Germany of the Herero rebellions in 1904 in German South West Africa (Namibia today) where in military interventions between 50% and 70% of the Herero population perished, known as the Herero and Namaqua Genocide.[92] The subduing of the Maji Maji uprising in German East Africa in 1905 was prominently published. The rejection of a supplementary budget to provide further funding for colonial conflicts at the end of 1906 led to the dissolution of the Reichstag and new elections.[93] "A wave of anti-colonial feeling began to gather momentum in Germany" and resulted in large voter turnouts in the so-called " Hottentot election" for the Reichstag in January 1907.[94] The conservative Bülow government barely survived, but in January 1907 the newly elected Reichstag imposed a "complete overhaul" upon the colonial service.[94]

New colonial policies (1905–1914) Edit

 
German Colonial Secretary Bernhard Dernburg (2nd from right) on an inspection tour in East Africa, with British officials at Nairobi in 1907
 
Port of Dar es Salaam, German East Africa, c. 1910

As a result of the colonial wars in South West Africa and East Africa, which had been caused by poor treatment of native peoples, it was considered necessary to change the German colonial administration, in favor of a more scientific approach to the employment of the colonies that improved the lives of the people in them. Therefore, the highest authority in colonial administration, the Colonial Department (Kolonialabteilung) was separated from the Foreign Office and, in May 1907, it became its own ministry, the Imperial Colonial Office (Reichskolonialamt).

 
Tsingdao with German buildings, c. 1900

The creator of the new colonial policy was a successful banker and private-sector restructurer, Bernhard Dernburg from Darmstadt, who was placed in charge of the Colonial Department in September 1906 and retained the role as Secretary of State of the revamped Colonial Office until 1910. Entrenched incompetents were screened out and summarily removed from office and "not a few had to stand trial. Replacing the misfits was a new breed of efficient, humane, colonial civil servant, usually the product of Dernburg's own creation, the ... Colonial Institute at Hamburg."[95] In African protectorates, especially Togoland and German East Africa, "improbably advanced and humane administrations emerged."[96] Dernburg went on tours of the colonies, to learn about their problems first-hand and find solutions. Capital investments by banks were secured with public funds of the imperial treasury to minimize risk. Dernburg, as a former banker, facilitated such thinking; he saw his commission to also turn the colonies into paying propositions. He oversaw large-scale expansion of infrastructure. Every African protectorate built rail lines to the interior.[97] Dar es Salaam evolved into "the showcase city of all of tropical Africa,"[98] Lomé grew into the "prettiest city in western Africa",[99] and Qingdao in China was, "in miniature, as German a city as Hamburg or Bremen".[100] Whatever the Germans constructed in their colonies was made to last.[98] Scientific and technical institutions for colonial purposes were established or expanded, in order to develop the colonies on these terms. Two of these, the Hamburg Colonial Institute and the German Colonial School are predecessor organizations of the modern universities of Hamburg and Kassel.

Dernburg declared that the indigenous population in the protectorates "was the most important factor in our colonies" and this was affirmed by new laws and initiatives.[95] Corporal punishment was abolished. Every colony in Africa and the Pacific established the beginnings of a public school system,[101] and every colony built and staffed hospitals.[102] In some colonies, native agricultural holdings were encouraged and supported.[103] In January 1909, Derburg said "The goal must be colonies closely bound to the Fatherland, administratively independent, intellectually self-sufficient, and healthy."

 
Railway station (1914) in Lüderitz, Namibia, pictured in 2006

Wilhelm Solf, who was Colonial Secretary from 1911 until 1918, also undertook tours in Africa in 1912 and 1913. The resulting impressions informed his colonial plans, which included an expansion of the powers of the governors and a ban on forced labor for Africans.[95] As governor of Samoa, he had referred to the islanders as "unsere braunen Schützlinge" (our brown charges), who could be guided but not forced.[104] Similarly, Heinrich Schnee, governor of East Africa from 1912, proclaimed that "the dominant feature of my administration [will be] ... the welfare of the natives entrusted into my care."[105] Solf also advocated a network of motorways in the colonies. He secured support for this comparatively peaceful colonial policy, instead of the highly militarized approach that had been taken up to this point, from all parties in the Reichstag, except for the right.

There were no further major revolts in the German colonies after 1905 and the economic efficiency of the overseas possessions rapidly increased, as a result of these new policies and improvements in shipping, especially the establishment of scheduled services with refrigerated holds, increased the amount of agricultural products from the colonies, exotic fruits and spices, that were sold to the public in Germany. Between 1906 and 1914, the production of palm oil and cocoa in the colonies doubled, the rubber production of the African colonies quadrupled, and the cotton exports from German East Africa increased tenfold. The total trade between Germany and its colonies increased from 72 million marks in 1906 to 264 million marks in 1913. Due to this economic growth, the income from colonial taxes and duties increased sixfold. Instead of being dependent on financial support from Germany, the colonies became or were on track to become financially independent. By 1914, only German New Guinea, Kiautschou, and the African Schutztruppen were subsidized.[106] "The colonial economy was thriving ... and roads, railways, shipping and telegraph communications were up to the minute."[96]

The colonies were romanticized. Geologists and cartographers explored what were then unmarked regions on European maps, identifying mountains and rivers, and demarcating boundaries. Hermann Detzner and one Captain Nugent, R.A., had charge of a joint project to demarcate the British and German frontiers of Cameroon, which was published in 1913.[107] Travelers and newspaper reporters brought back stories of black and brown natives serving German managers and settlers. There were also suspicions and reports of colonial malfeasance, corruption and brutality in some protectorates, and Lutheran and Roman Catholic missionaries dispatched disturbing reports to their mission headquarters in Germany.[108]

Idealists often volunteered for selection and appointment to government posts; the commercially minded, to grow dividends at home for the Hanseatic trading houses and shipping lines. Subsequent historians would commend German colonialism in those years as "an engine of modernization with far-reaching effects for the future."[109]

End of the German colonial empire (1914–1918) Edit

Conquest in World War I Edit

 
Austrian lieutenant Paul Fiedler[110] bombarding a South African military camp at the railway station of Tschaukaib, German South West Africa, December 1914
 
General Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck's troops defeat Portugal at Ngomano, Portuguese East Africa on 25 November 1917.
 
Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck's force stops fighting the Allies on 25 November 1918 after the Armistice.

In the years before the outbreak of the World War, British colonial officers viewed the Germans as deficient in "colonial aptitude", but "whose colonial administration was nevertheless superior to those of the other European states".[111] Anglo-German colonial issues in the decade before 1914 were minor and both empires, the British and German, took conciliatory attitudes. Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey, considered still a moderate in 1911, was willing to "study the map of Africa in a pro-German spirit".[112] Britain further recognized that Germany really had little of value to offer in territorial transactions; however, advice to Grey and Prime Minister H. H. Asquith hardened by early 1914 "to stop the trend of what the advisors considered Germany's taking and Britain's giving."[113]

Once war was declared in late July 1914 Britain and its allies promptly moved against the colonies. The public was informed that German colonies were a threat because "Every German colony has a powerful wireless station – they will talk to one another across the seas, and at every opportunity they [German ships] will dash from cover to harry and destroy our commerce, and maybe, to raid our coasts."[114] The British position that Germany was a uniquely brutal and cruel colonial power originated during the war; it had not been said during peacetime.[115] The German overseas Colonies began to fall one by one to the allied forces. The first to go was Togoland to the British and to the French, then the Cameroons to the allied forces. Germany's colonies put up a stout fight but by 1916 Germany lost most of its colonies, except German East Africa, where a German force of General Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck held out against the Allies until the end of the war.

In the Pacific, Britain's ally Japan declared war on Germany in 1914 and quickly seized several of Germany's island colonies, the Mariana, Caroline and Marshall Islands, with virtually no resistance. One reason these colonies fell so easily is because of the departure of Admiral von Spee's fleet. In other parts of the Pacific Western Samoa, another German colony fell without a fight to a New Zealand force. Later on an Australian invasion of Neu-Pommern beat the Germans seizing the entire colony within a few weeks.

South Africa's J. C. Smuts, now in Britain's small War Cabinet, spoke of German schemes for world power, militarization and exploitation of resources, indicating Germany threatened western civilization itself. While propaganda was said about both sides it was here in Africa where Germany saw a crushing defeat. It was at Togoland where the Germans were quickly outnumbered leaving them to flee the capital which led to a large pursuit of German forces by allied armies leading to the eventual surrender of German forces on 26 August 1914. Smuts' warnings were repeated in the press. The idea took hold that they should not be returned to Germany after the war.[116]

Confiscation Edit

Germany's overseas empire was dismantled following defeat in World War I. With the concluding Treaty of Versailles, Article 22, German colonies were transformed into League of Nations mandates and divided between Belgium, the United Kingdom, and certain British Dominions, France and Japan with the determination not to see any of them returned to Germany – a guarantee secured by Article 119.[117]

In Africa, the United Kingdom and France divided German Kamerun (Cameroons) and Togoland. Belgium gained Ruanda-Urundi in northwestern German East Africa, the United Kingdom obtained by far the greater landmass of this colony, thus gaining the "missing link" in the chain of British possessions stretching from South Africa to Egypt (Cape to Cairo), and Portugal received the Kionga Triangle, a sliver of German East Africa. German South West Africa was taken under mandate by the Union of South Africa.[118] In terms of the population of 12.5 million people in 1914, 42 percent were transferred to mandates of Britain and its dominions, 33 percent to France, and 25 percent to Belgium.[119]

In the Pacific, Japan gained Germany's islands north of the equator (the Marshall Islands, the Carolines, the Marianas, the Palau Islands) and Kiautschou in China. German Samoa was assigned to New Zealand; German New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago and Nauru[120] went to Australia as mandates.[121]

British placement of surrogate responsibility for former German colonies on white-settler dominions was at the time determined to be the most expedient option for the British government – and an appropriate reward for the Dominions having fulfilled their "great and urgent imperial service" through military intervention at the behest of and for Great Britain.[122] It also meant that British colonies now had colonies of their own – which was very much influenced at the Paris proceedings by W. M. Hughes, William Massey, and Louis Botha, the prime ministers of Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.[123] The principle of "self-determination" embodied in the League of Nations covenant was not considered to apply to these colonies and was "regarded as meaningless".[124] To "allay President [Woodrow] Wilson's suspicions of British imperialism", the system of "mandates" was drawn up and agreed to by the British War Cabinet (with the French and Italians in tow),[125] a device by which conquered enemy territory would be held not as a possession but as "sacred trusts".[124] But "far from envisaging the eventual independence of the [former] German colonies, Allied statesmen at the Paris Conference regarded 1919 as the renewal, not the end, of an imperial era."[124] In deliberations the British "War Cabinet had confidence that natives everywhere would opt for British rule"; however, the cabinet acknowledged "the necessity to prove that its policy toward the German colonies was not motivated by aggrandizement" since the Empire was seen by America as a "land devouring octopus"[126] with a "voracious territorial appetite".[127]

President Wilson saw the League of Nations as "'residuary trustee' for the [German] colonies" captured and occupied by "rapacious conquerors".[128] The victors retained the German overseas possessions and did so with the belief that Australian, Belgian, British, French, Japanese, New Zealand, Portuguese and South African rule was superior to Germany's.[129] Several decades later during the collapse of the then existing colonial empires, Africans and Asians cited the same arguments that had been used by the Allies against German colonial rule – they now simply demanded "to stand by themselves".[130]

Colonialism after 1918 Edit

 
Stamp from 1921, "Give Germany its colonies back!"

In Germany after the First World War, the general public opinion was that the seizure of the colonies had been unlawful and that Germany had a right to its colonies. Nearly all the parties elected to the Weimar National Assembly on 19 January 1919, voted in favor of a resolution which demanded the return of the colonies on 1 March 1919, i.e. while the Paris Peace Conference was still in progress. Only seven delegates from the USPD voted against it.[131] The charge that Germany had failed to "civilize" the peoples under its control was seen as particularly outrageous – this had played a central role in German colonialism's self-legitimation. This protest achieved nothing – in the final version of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was required to give up all its colonies.[132] With the exception of German Southwest Africa, where some descendants of German settlers still live today (the German Namibians), all Germans were required to leave the colonies.

Weimar Republic Edit

 
Colonial Memorial Day on 24 April 1924 at the Humboldt University of Berlin, celebrating the 40th anniversary of the declaration of the Southwest African protectorate
 
Notgeld of 1922, "Give us our colonies back! – Samoa."

Even in the early phase of the Weimar Republic, there were voices calling for the return of the colonies – among them Konrad Adenauer, who was then mayor of Cologne. Adenauer was Deputy President of the German Colonial Society from 1931 to 1933. From 1924 there was a Colonial Office in the Federal Foreign Office, directed by Edmund Brückner, the former Governor of Togo. Brückner's policy was that the return of Togo, Cameroon, and German East Africa were the most likely.[133] In 1925, the Colonial Imperial Society ('Korag') was established as an umbrella organization, from which the Reichskolonialbund emerged in 1933. Also in 1925, Johannes Bell, who had been Colonial Minister in the Scheidemann cabinet, founded the "Interparty Colonial Union", which included members of the whole political spectrum, from the Nazi party to the SPD.[134] In 1925, some settlers also returned to their plantations in Cameroon, which they had bought the previous year with financial support from the Foreign Office.[135][136] In anticipation of the recovery of the colonies, the Colonial Women's School of Rendsburg was founded in 1926. In 1931, an Institute for Foreign and Colonial Forestry was founded at the Royal Saxon Academy of Forestry.

The treaty of Versailles attributed war guilt to Germany, but most Germans did not accept this and many saw the confiscation of the colonies by the Allies as a theft, especially after the South African premier Louis Botha stated that all allegations which the Allies had published during the war about the German colonial empire were, without exception, baseless fabrications. German colonial revisionists spoke of a "Colonial Guilt Myth."[137][138][139]

Nazi period 1933–1945 Edit

Chancellor Adolf Hitler's speeches sometimes did mention return of the lost colonies, as a bargaining point, but at all times his real target was Eastern Europe.[140][141] In 1934, the Nazi party established its own Office of Colonial Policy, which was led by Heinrich Schnee, and then Franz Ritter von Epp and was a very active grass roots organization. The Reichskolonialbund, established in 1936, under Franz Ritter von Epp absorbed all colonial organizations and was meant to raise procolonial sentiments, and build public interest in former German colonies. However, no new overseas colonial enterprises took place and with the onset of World War II in 1939 the organization entered a decline. It was disbanded by decree in 1943 for "activity irrelevant to the war". Although it tolerated the colonialists, the Nazi government focused on territorial gains inside Europe. At no time did it negotiate or demand from London or Paris the return of any lost colony. According to Willeke Sandler: "Between 1933 and 1943, Rudolf Hess, Martin Borman, and Joachim von Ribbentrop, among others, hindered colonialists' publicity activities, seeing them as representative of a discarded past and as irrelevant when compared with Eastern European 'Lebensraum.'"[142]

Federal Republic Edit

 
West German vice minister of workfare, Wilhelm Claussen (left), with Paul Armegee, transport minister of Togo, in Bonn, 1961

The former German colonies played no role in the politics of Post-war Germany. However, individual west German politicians proposed undertaking late or postcolonial enterprises, especially the management of trusts in Tanganyika or Togo.[143] Even within the African freedom movement, these suggestions co-existed with calls for decolonization. At the end of 1952, members of the Ewe people submitted in a memorandum to the United Nations Trusteeship Council proposing that the territories of German Togoland taken by the British and the French be reunited and led towards independence together.[144] This initiative was not accepted. In 1960, Adolf Friedrich zu Mecklenburg, the final German governor of Togo, was invited to Togo's independence celebrations by Sylvanus Olympio, President of Togo.[145]

Efforts to revive the Colonial War League after the Second World War led to the establishment in Hamburg in 1955 of a "Union of Former Colonial Troops," ancestor of the current Traditional league of former colonial and overseas troops [de].

The final remains of the Protectorate Law survived until the legal expiration of the Colonial Society in 1975 and fiscal adjustments in 1992. Colonial history continues to be commemorated by colonial monuments, street names, and buildings related to German colonial history. In many places this has led to discussions about cultural memory and to calls for modification or renaming.[146]

Representatives of the Herero and Nama, whose ancestors were killed in their thousands in German-administered Southwest Africa between 1904 and 1908, having taken legal action against Germany in the American courts. In January 2017, a class action against the German government was submitted to a court in New York. The statement of claim speaks of over 100,000 fatalities. In March 2017, it became known that the Namibian government was considering an action against Germany in the International Court of Justice in The Hague. It was said that damages were sought in the region of 30 billion dollars.[147]

The publication of edited volumes on the themes of colonialism (2012) and German Colonial History (2019) by the Federal Agency for Civic Education aimed to bring about "revived awareness of colonialism in political, legal, and psycological spheres" to a wider group of readers and scholars, as the editor Asiye Öztürk put it.[148][149] In 2015, Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf and the University of Dschang in Cameroon established a joint-research project on "Colonial links", which culminated in an exhibition in Düsseldorf in 2017.[150][151] After that, the exhibition traveled to Dschang and to various German cities, where it was augmented with aspects of local relevance. Finally, a volume on the exhibition was published in 2019.[152][153]

Administration and colonial policies Edit

Colonial administration Edit

 
Political diagram of the German Empire and its colonies
 
The way to the governor's palace in Togo, 1904
 
Hendrik Witbooi with the German governor Theodor Leutwein of South West Africa (toasting to each other), 1896
 
Askari troops in German East Africa, c. 1906

Between 1890 and 1907, the uppermost leadership of the empire's protectorates (Schutzgebiete) was the Colonial Division (Kolonialabteilung) of the Foreign Office (Auswärtiges Amt), which was headed by the Imperial Chancellor. In 1907, the Colonial Division was separated from the Foreign Office and became its own ministry (Amt), called the Imperial Colonial Office (Reichskolonialamt), with Bernhard Dernburg as its state secretary.

By an Imperial decree of 10 October 1890, the Colonial Council (Kolonialrat) was placed alongside the Colonial Division. It contained representatives of the Colonial Societies and experts appointed by the Chancellor.

The German treaty port of Kiautschou was administered by the Imperial Naval Office (Reichsmarineamt), not the Foreign Office or the Colonial Office.

The highest legal authority for the colonies was the Reichsgericht (Imperial Court of Justice) in Leipzig.

The legal situation in the colonies was first regulated by the 1886 law concerning the legal relationships of the German protectorates, which became the Protectorate Law [de] (Schutzgebietsgesetz) in 1900 after further changes.[154] It introduced German law in the German colonies for Europeans, through consular jurisdiction. The Consular Jurisdiction Law (Konsulargerichtsbarkeitsgesetz ) of 1879 had granted German consuls overseas jurisdiction over German citizens in specific circumstances. The Protectorate Law specified that the regulations on consular jurisdiction would also apply in the colonies. In so far as they were relevant to consular jurisdiction, therefore, various important legal provisions of civil law, criminal law, legal procedure, and due process also came into force in the colonies.[155] Alongside this, over time, further special provisions of colonial law were established. For indigenous people in the colonies, the Kaiser initially held all legislative power. Over the following years, the Imperial Chancellor and other officials empowered by him were also given the authority to regulate the administration, jurisdiction, policing, etc. of the colonies. Thus, in the German colonies there was, at a fundamental level, a dual legal structure, with different laws for the Europeans and the indigenous people.[156] No colonial criminal law code was codified during German colonial rule.[157]

Administration of individual colonies Edit

At the top of the administration of each colony was the Governor, who was aided by a chancellor (as deputy and assistance in legal matters), secretaries, and other officials.

The districts (Bezirke), the largest administrative subdivisions of a colony, were administered by a District Officer (Bezirksamtmann). In turn, a district was divided into district branches (Bezirksnebenstellen). Another form of administration in the colonies was the Resident (Residentur). These were comparable to the districts in size, but the native rulers were allowed far more power in residencies than in districts, helping to keep the costs of German administration as low as possible.

Schutztruppen were stationed in the colonies of Cameroon, Southwest Africa, and East Africa for internal military security. The police forces in the colonies were police troops (Polizeitruppen), organized on military lines. In the Kiautschou Leased Bay Territory, which was under the control of the German Imperial Naval Office, marines of the 3rd Sea Battalion were stationed as police.[158]

In the colonies, there were Protectorate Courts (Schutzgebietsgerichte), modeled on consular courts. Jurisdiction over indigenous peoples, especially in criminal cases, was invested in the colonial officials in the colonies. In noncriminal matters, indigenous authorities were granted jurisdiction over their communities and could render judgment in accordance with local law.[159]

For Germans and other Europeans, the district court (Bezirksgericht) had jurisdiction in first instance and there was a right of appeal to an upper court (Obergericht). In Togo, the size of the European population made an upper court impractical, so the upper court of Kamerun also acted as the appellate court for Togo.[160]

German colonial population Edit

The Pennsylvania Dutch who emigrated to America in the 17th and 18th centuries were religious refugees from the Thirty Years War which devastated the German states 1616-1648 rather than colonial settlers. Germantown, Pennsylvania, was founded in 1684 and 65,000 Germans landed in Philadelphia alone between 1727 and 1775, and more at other American ports. More than 950,000 Germans immigrated to the US in the 1850s and 1,453,000 in the 1880s, but these were personal migrants, unrelated to the German Empire (created 1871) and later colonial plans. The Empire's colonies were primarily commercial and plantation regions and did not attract large numbers of German settlers.[161] The vast majority of German emigrants chose North America as their destination and not the colonies – of 1,085,124 emigrants between 1887 and 1906, 1,007,574 headed to the United States.[161] When the imperial government invited the 22,000 soldiers mobilized to subdue the Hereros to settle in German South West Africa, and offered financial aid, only 5% accepted.[161]

The German colonial population numbered 5,125 in 1903, and about 23,500 in 1913.[162] The German pre–World War I colonial population consisted of 19,696 Germans in Africa and the Pacific colonies in 1913, including more than 3,000 police and soldiers, and 3,806 in Kiaochow (1910), of which 2,275 were navy and military staff.[162] In Africa (1913), 12,292 Germans lived in Southwest Africa, 4,107 in German East Africa and 1,643 in Cameroon.[162] In the Pacific colonies in 1913 there were 1,645 Germans.[162] After 1905 a ban on marriage was enacted forbidding mixed couples between German and native population in South West Africa, and after 1912 in Samoa.[163]

After World War I, the military and "undesired persons" were expelled from the German protectorates. In 1934 the former colonies were inhabited by 16,774 Germans, of whom about 12,000 lived in the former Southwest African colony.[162] Once the new owners of the colonies again permitted immigration from Germany, the numbers rose in the following years above the pre–World War I total.[162]

Relationship between German and indigenous populations Edit

 
German colonial leader in Togo, c. 1885

Legal inequality Edit

The relationship between the Germans and the indigenous populations in the German colonies was characterized by legal and social inequality, as in all the other colonial empires. There were two separate legal systems and people were assigned to one or the other on the basis of racial criteria. The "whites" (i.e. the German and European inhabitants of the colonies) formed a small, highly privileged minority – rarely reaching even 1% of a colony's total population.[164] They enjoyed all the rights, privileges, and duties of normal German law. Non-German Europeans were legally their equals.[165]

The 13 million or so "natives" of the German colonial empire did not become German citizens in 1913, when German citizenship was first introduced. They were not considered Imperial citizens, but only subjects or wards of Germany. German laws applied to them only if explicitly stated by the individual statute. In particular, they were shut out of the court system. They had no right of appeal against decisions of the colonial authorities or first-instance judgments. For the 10,000 or so people of Arab and Indian descent who lived in German East Africa, the governors had the ability to issue special regulations.[166] According the Protectorate Law, however, it was possible for "natives" to be granted Imperial citizenship and to pass that citizenship on to their children. The cause of this was the fact that the children of mixed marriages automatically received German citizenship. This was perceived as a threat to the "German body politic" and its "racial purity."[167] As sexual relationships between the population groups had grown increasingly common, the colonies gradually banned "civil marriage between whites and natives" from 1905. Extra-marital sexual relationships were socially unacceptable, as leading to "Kaffirization" (Verkaffirung). In 1912, the Reichstag held a debate about the possibility of miscegenation, resulting in most parties agreeing that miscegenation should be legalized. However, no law on this was ever enacted.[168] The ban remained in effect until the end of the German Empire.

Evangelism, education, and healthcare Edit

 
School of the North German Missionary Society in Togo, 1899

The German colonizers conceived of the indigenous populations as "children": people at a lower level of development, who had to be protected, educated, and raised up.[169] German missionary societies were already concerning themselves with the education and conversion of overseas populations in the 1820s. Protestant organizations included the Berlin Missionary Society, Rhenish Missionary Society, Leipzig Missionary Society [de], and the North German Missionary Society.[170] After the Kulturkampf had subsided, Catholic missionary societies were allowed to operate in the colonies too.[171]

These missionary societies established stations in the colonies, where they instructed the indigenous people in basic education, modern agricultural techniques, and Christianity. They had substantial success, since the breakdown of precolonial society, which the German land seizures and colonial wars had engendered, often brought a spiritual crisis with it and the indigenous people sought comfort and support from the god of the new rulers, who appeared to have proven his superiority. Since the goal of the missionaries was the conversion of the indigenous peoples and they emphasized the virtue of neighborly love, they often had cause to protest against their abuse and exploitation by the colonial administration and plantation owners. In order to support themselves and to model good behavior, the missionaries themselves often had plantations, which were dependent on the indigenous people's skill and willingness to work. These goals often came into conflict. The missionaries were generally rather tolerant regarding traditional customs and practices. For example, they often allowed polygamy, which was widespread in Africa and the Pacific. The exception to this was the Islamic culture of the East African coast, which the missionaries strongly opposed.[172]

Medicine and science Edit

In her African and South Seas colonies, Germany established diverse biological and agricultural stations. Staff specialists and the occasional visiting university group conducted soil analyses, developed plant hybrids, experimented with fertilizers, studied vegetable pests and ran courses in agronomy for settlers and natives and performed a host of other tasks.[105] Successful German plantation operators realized the benefits of systematic scientific inquiry and instituted and maintained their own stations with their own personnel, who further engaged in exploration and documentation of the native fauna and flora.[173]

Research by bacteriologists Robert Koch and Paul Ehrlich and other scientists was funded by the imperial treasury and was freely shared with other nations. More than three million Africans were vaccinated against smallpox.[96] Medical doctors the world over benefited from pioneering work into tropical diseases and German pharmaceutical discoveries "became a standard therapy for sleeping sickness and relapsing fever. The German presence (in Africa) was vital for significant achievements in medicine and agriculture.[98]

By the late 1880s German physicians identified venereal disease as a public health threat to Germany and its colonies. To fight it in Germany doctors used biopolitics to educate and regulate the bodies of likely victims. Propaganda campaigns did not work well in the colonies, so they imposed a much greater degree of supervision and coercion over targeted groups such as prostitutes.[174]

During the Herero genocide Eugen Fischer, a German scientist, came to the concentration camps to conduct medical experiments on race, using children of Herero people and multiracial children of Herero women and German men as test subjects.[175] Together with Theodor Mollison he also experimented upon Herero prisoners.[176] Those experiments included sterilization, injection of smallpox, typhus as well as tuberculosis.[177] The numerous cases of mixed offspring upset the German colonial administration, which was concerned with maintaining "racial purity".[177] Eugen Fischer studied 310 multiracial children, calling them "Rehoboth bastards" of "lesser racial quality".[177] Fischer also subjected them to numerous racial tests such as head and body measurements, and eye and hair examinations. In conclusion of his studies he advocated genocide of alleged "inferior races", stating that "whoever thinks thoroughly the notion of race, can not arrive at a different conclusion".[177] Fischer's actions (at the time considered) scientific and his torment of the children were part of a wider history of abusing Africans for experiments, and echoed earlier actions by German anthropologists who stole skeletons and bodies from African graveyards and took them to Europe for research or sale.[177] An estimated 3000 skulls were sent to Germany for study. In October 2011, after 3 years of talks, the first skulls were due to be returned to Namibia for burial.[178] Other experiments were made by Doctor Bofinger, who injected Herero who were suffering from scurvy with various substances including arsenic and opium. Afterward, he researched the effects of these substances by performing autopsies on dead bodies.[179]

Social Darwinism Edit

Social Darwinism is the theory "that human groups and races are subject to the same laws of natural selection as Charles Darwin had perceived in plants and animals in nature."[180] According to numerous historians, an important ideological component of German nationalism as developed by the intellectual elite was Social Darwinism.[181] It gave an impetus to German assertiveness as a world economic and military power, aimed at competing with France and the British Empire for world power. German colonial rule in Africa 1884–1914 was an expression of nationalism and moral superiority that was justified by constructing an image of the natives as "Other". German colonization was characterized by the use of repressive violence in the name of 'culture' and 'civilization'. Techniques included genocide in parts of Africa.[182] Furthermore, the wide acceptance among intellectuals of social Darwinism justified Germany's right to acquire colonial territories as a matter of the 'survival of the fittest', according to historian Michael Schubert.[183][184]

 
Map showing the location of the various Duala ethnic groups of Cameroon

On the other hand, Germany's cultural-missionary project boasted that its colonial programs were humanitarian and educational endeavors. Colonial German physicians and administrators tried to make a case for increasing the native population, in order to also increase their numbers of laborers. Eugene Fischer, an anthropologist at the University of Freiburg, agreed with that notion saying that they should only be supported as necessary and as they prove to be useful. Once their use is gone, Europeans should "allow free competition, which in my (Fischer's) opinion means their demise."[185]

The Duala people, a Bantu group in Cameroon, readily welcomed German policies. The number of German-speaking Africans increased in four West African German colonies prior to 1914. The Duala leadership in 1884 placed the tribe under German rule. Most converted to Protestantism and were educated along German lines. Colonial officials and businessmen preferred them as inexpensive clerks to German government offices and firms in Africa.[186]

Legacy Edit

Continuity thesis Edit

 
Map of Former German Colonies throughout History:
  German Empire
  Colonies of the German Empire
  Prussian-Brandenburg colonies
  "Little Venice" (Controlled by a German firm)

In recent years scholars have debated the "continuity thesis" that links German colonialist brutalities to the treatment of Jews, Roma, Poles and Russians during World War II. Some historians argue that Germany's role in southwestern Africa gave rise to an emphasis on racial superiority at home, which in turn was used by the Nazis. They argue that the limited successes of German colonialism overseas led to a decision to shift the main focus of German expansionism into Central and Eastern Europe, with the Mitteleuropa plan. German colonialism, therefore, turned to the European continent.[187]

While a minority view during the Kaiserzeit, the idea developed in full swing under Erich Ludendorff and his political activity in the Baltic states, Ukraine, and Poland. Subsequently, after the defeat of Russia during World War I, Germany acquired vast territories with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and created several administrative regions like Ober Ost. Here also the German settlement would be implemented, and the whole governmental organization was developed to serve German needs while controlling the local ethnically diverse population. While the African colonies were too isolated and not suitable for mass settlement of Germans, areas in Central and Eastern Europe offered better potential for German settlement.[188] Other scholars, are skeptical and challenge the continuity thesis.[189] Additionally, however, only one former colonial officer gained an important position in the Nazi administrative hierarchy.[9]

Impact Edit

 
Examples of German language on signs in Namibia

Unlike other colonial empires such as the British, French, Portuguese or Spanish, Germany left very few traces of its own language, institutions or customs in its former colonies. As of today, no country outside Europe uses the German language as an official language, although in Namibia, German is a recognized national language and there are numerous German placenames and architectural structures in the country. A small German ethnic minority also resides in the country.

List of German colonies (as of 1912) Edit

Territory Capital Established Disestablished Area[1] Total population[1] German population[1] Current countries
Kamerun
Kamerun
Jaunde 1884 1920 495,000 km2 2,540,000 1,359   Cameroon
  Nigeria
  Chad
  Gabon
  Central African Republic
  Republic of the Congo
Togoland
Togo
Bagida (1884–87)
Sebeab (1887–97)
Lomé (1897–1916)
1884 1920 87,200 km2 1,003,000 316   Ghana
  Togo
German South West Africa
Deutsch-Südwestafrika
Windhuk (from 1891) 1884 1920 835,100 km2 86,000 12,135   Namibia
German East Africa
Deutsch-Ostafrika
Bagamoyo (1885–1890)
Dar es Salaam (1890–1916)
Tabora (1916, temporary)[190]
1891 1920 995,000 km2 7,511,000 3,579   Burundi
  Kenya
  Mozambique
  Rwanda
  Tanzania
German New Guinea
Deutsch-Neu-Guinea
Including Imperial German Pacific Protectorates:
Finschhafen (1884–1891)
Madang (1891–1899)
Herbertshöhe (1899–1910)
Simpsonhafen (1910–1914)
1884 1920 243,291 km2 601,000 665   Papua New Guinea
  Solomon Islands
  Palau
  Federated States of Micronesia
  Nauru
  Northern Mariana Islands
  Marshall Islands
German Samoa
Deutsch-Samoa
Apia 1899 1920 2,570 km2 38,000 294   Samoa
Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory
Pachtgebiet Kiautschou
Tsingtau 1897 1920 515 km2 200,000 400   China
Total (as of 1912) 2,658,161 km2 11,979,000 18,748 22

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

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  2. ^ Diese deutschen Wörter kennt man noch in der Südsee, von Matthias Heine 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine "Einst hatten die Deutschen das drittgrößte Kolonialreich[...]"
  3. ^ Biskup, Thomas; Kohlrausch, Martin. "Germany 2: Colonial Empire". Credo Online. Credo Reference. from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  4. ^ See North German Missionary Society.
  5. ^ Washusen, p. 61.
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  8. ^ Walter Nuhn: Kolonialpolitik und Marine. Die Rolle der Kaiserlichen Marine bei der Gründung und Sicherung des deutschen Kolonialreiches 1884–1914. Bernard & Graefe, Bonn 2002, p. 27.
  9. ^ a b Biskup, Thomas. "Germany: 2. Colonial empire". Credo Reference. John Wiley and Sons Ltd. from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  10. ^ Washausen, p. 67-114; the West and East Africa firms
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  12. ^ Percy Ernst Schramm: Deutschland und Übersee. Der deutsche Handel mit den anderen Kontinenten, insbesondere Afrika, von Karl V. bis zu Bismarck. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Rivalität im Wirtschaftsleben. Georg Westermann Verlag, Braunschweig 1950.
  13. ^ Franz Theodor Maurer: Die Nikobaren: Colonial-Geschichte und Beschreibung nebst motivirtem Vorschlage zur Colonisation dieser Inseln durch Preussen, Carl Heymanns Verlag, Berlin 1867.
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Sources and references Edit

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Bibliography Edit

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  • Wildenthal, Lora. German women for empire, 1884-1945 (Duke University Press, 2001).

In German Edit

  • Detzner, Hermann, (Oberleut.) Kamerun Boundary: Die nigerische Grenze von Kamerun zwischen Yola und dem Cross-fluss. M. Teuts. Schutzgeb. 26 (13): 317–338.
  • Haupt, Werner (1984). Deutschlands Schutzgebiete in Übersee 1884–1918. [Germany's Overseas Protectorates 1884–1918]. Friedberg: Podzun-Pallas Verlag. ISBN 3-7909-0204-7.
  • Nagl, Dominik (2007). Grenzfälle – Staatsangehörigkeit, Rassismus und nationale Identität unter deutscher Kolonialherrschaft. Frankfurt/Main: Peter Lang Verlag. ISBN 978-3-631-56458-5.
  • Schultz-Naumann, Joachim (1985). Unter Kaisers Flagge, Deutschlands Schutzgebiete im Pazifik und in China einst und heute. [Under the Kaiser's flag, Germany's Protectorates in the Pacific and in China then and today]. Munich: Universitas Verlag.
  • Schaper, Ulrike (2012). Koloniale Verhandlungen. Gerichtsbarkeit, Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884–1916. Frankfurt am Main: Campus Verlag. ISBN 978-3-593-39639-2.
  • Karl Waldeck: "Gut und Blut für unsern Kaiser", Windhoek 2010, ISBN 978-99945-71-55-0
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 1, 2. Auflage Windhoek 2012, ISBN 978-99916-872-1-6
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 2, "Naulila", Windhoek 2012, ISBN 978-99916-872-3-0
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 3, "Kämpfe im Süden", Windhoek 2014, ISBN 978-99916-872-8-5
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 4, "Der Süden ist verloren", Windhoek 2015, ISBN 978-99916-909-2-6
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 5, "Aufgabe der Küste", Windhoek 2016, ISBN 978-99916-909-4-0
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 6, "Aufgabe der Zentralregionen", Windhoek 2017, ISBN 978-99916-909-5-7
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 7, "Der Ring schließt sich", Windhoek 2018, ISBN 978-99916-909-7-1
  • Historicus Africanus: "Der 1. Weltkrieg in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1914/15", Band 8, "Das Ende bei Khorab", Windhoek 2018, ISBN 978-99916-909-9-5

In French Edit

  • Gemeaux (de), Christine,(dir., présentation et conclusion): "Empires et colonies. L'Allemagne du Saint-Empire au deuil post-colonial", Clermont-Ferrand, PUBP, coll. Politiques et Identités, 2010, ISBN 978-2-84516-436-9.

External links Edit

  • Deutsche-Schutzgebiete.de ("German Protectorates") (in German)

german, colonial, empire, this, article, about, colonies, german, empire, territories, nazi, germany, reichskommissariat, templar, colonies, israel, german, colony, german, deutsches, kolonialreich, constituted, overseas, colonies, dependencies, territories, g. This article is about colonies of the German Empire For the territories of Nazi Germany see Reichskommissariat For the Templar colonies in Israel see German Colony The German colonial empire German Deutsches Kolonialreich constituted the overseas colonies dependencies and territories of the German Empire Unified in the early 1870s the chancellor of this time period was Otto von Bismarck Short lived attempts at colonization by individual German states had occurred in preceding centuries but Bismarck resisted pressure to construct a colonial empire until the Scramble for Africa in 1884 Claiming much of the remaining uncolonized areas of Africa Germany built the third largest colonial empire at the time after the British and French 2 The German colonial empire encompassed parts of several African countries including parts of present day Burundi Rwanda Tanzania Namibia Cameroon Gabon Congo Central African Republic Chad Nigeria Togo Ghana as well as northeastern New Guinea Samoa and numerous Micronesian islands German colonial empireDeutsches Kolonialreich German 1884 1920Flag Coat of armsGerman colonies and protectorates in 1914StatusColonial empireCapitalBerlinCommon languagesGermanLocal Swahili Rwanda Rundi Burundi Rwanda Buha kingdom in Tanzania Arabic East African colonies History Established1884 Abushiri revolt1888 Heligoland Zanzibar Treaty1890 Adamawa Wars1899 Herero Wars1904 Maji Maji Rebellion1905 Treaty of Versailles1919 Disestablished1920Area191231 025 468 1 km2 11 979 000 sq mi Population 191211 979 000 1 An East African Askari soldier holding Germany s colonial flagGermany lost control of most of its colonial empire at the beginning of the First World War in 1914 but some German forces held out in German East Africa until the end of the war After the German defeat in World War I Germany s colonial empire was officially dissolved with the Treaty of Versailles between the Allies and German Weimar Republic Each colony became a League of Nations mandate under the administration although not sovereignty of one of the victorious powers 3 Talk of regaining their lost colonial possessions persisted in Germany until 1943 but never became an official goal of the German government Contents 1 Origins 1 1 German Confederation and the Zollverein 1 2 First state sponsored colonial venture 1857 1862 1 3 Bismarck s rejection of colonization 1862 1871 1 4 Debate and tentative steps under the new German Empire 1871 1878 2 Establishment of the empire 1884 1890 2 1 Bismarck moves towards a colonial policy 1878 1883 2 2 Colonization under Bismarck 1884 1888 2 2 1 Causes 2 2 2 Company land acquisitions and stewardship 2 3 Halt to colonial acquisitions 1888 1890 3 The empire under Kaiser Wilhelm 1890 1914 3 1 Acquisitions after 1890 3 2 Anticolonial Resistance 1897 1905 3 3 New colonial policies 1905 1914 4 End of the German colonial empire 1914 1918 4 1 Conquest in World War I 4 2 Confiscation 4 3 Colonialism after 1918 4 3 1 Weimar Republic 4 3 2 Nazi period 1933 1945 4 3 3 Federal Republic 5 Administration and colonial policies 5 1 Colonial administration 5 1 1 Administration of individual colonies 5 2 German colonial population 5 3 Relationship between German and indigenous populations 5 3 1 Legal inequality 5 3 2 Evangelism education and healthcare 5 4 Medicine and science 5 5 Social Darwinism 6 Legacy 6 1 Continuity thesis 6 2 Impact 7 List of German colonies as of 1912 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 Sources and references 11 Bibliography 11 1 In German 11 2 In French 12 External linksOrigins EditSee also German colonial projects before 1871 nbsp Gross Friedrichsburg a Brandenburg colony 1683 1717 in the territory of modern GhanaGermans had traditions of foreign sea borne trade dating back to the Hanseatic League German emigrants had flowed eastward in the direction of the Baltic littoral Russia and Transylvania and westward to the Americas and North German merchants and missionaries showed interest in overseas engagements 4 The Hanseatic republics of Hamburg and Bremen sent traders across the globe Their trading houses conducted themselves as successful Privatkolonisatoren independent colonizers concluding treaties and land purchases in Africa and the Pacific with chiefs and or other tribal leaders These early agreements with local entities later formed the basis for annexation treaties diplomatic support and military protection by the German government 5 However until their 1871 unification the German states had not concentrated on the development of a navy and this essentially had precluded German participation in earlier imperialist scrambles for remote colonial territory Without a blue water navy a would be colonial power could not reliably defend supply or trade with overseas dependencies The German states prior to 1870 had retained separate political structures and goals and German foreign policy up to and including the age of Otto von Bismarck 1815 1898 in office as Prussian Foreign Minister from 1862 to 1890 concentrated on resolving the German question in Europe and on securing German interests on the continent citation needed However by 1891 the Germans were mostly united under Prussian rule 6 They also sought a more clear cut German state and saw colonies as a good way to achieve that citation needed German Confederation and the Zollverein Edit In the states of the German Confederation founded in 1815 and the Zollverein founded in 1834 there was some call from private and economic interests for the establishment of German colonies especially in the 1840s 7 However governments had no such aspirations In 1839 private interests founded the Hamburg Colonial Society de which sought to purchase the Chatham Islands east of New Zealand and settle German emigrants there but Great Britain had a preexisting claim to the island Hamburg relied on the Royal Navy for its worldwide shipping interests and therefore gave no political support to the Colonial Society 8 The Society for the Protection of German Immigrants to Texas established in Mainz in 1842 sought to expand the German settlements into a colony of New Germany German Neu Deutschland About 7400 settlers were involved The venture proved a complete failure There was a constant lack of supplies and land and around half of the colonists died The plan was definitively ended with the annexation of Texas by the United States in 1845 9 Starting in the 1850s German commercial enterprises spread into areas that would later become German colonies in West Africa East Africa the Samoan Islands the unexplored north east quarter of New Guinea with its adjacent islands the Douala delta in Cameroon and the mainland coast across from Zanzibar 10 First state sponsored colonial venture 1857 1862 Edit In 1857 the Austrian frigate Novara departed from Triest on the Novara Expedition which aimed to explore and take possession of the Nicobar islands in the Indian Ocean The Novara arrived at the Nicobars in 1858 but the Austrians did not subsequently lay claim to the islands nbsp The Thetis one of the ships of the East Asia SquadronThe next state sponsored attempt to acquire a colony occurred in 1859 when Prussia attempted to claim the island of Formosa modern Taiwan Prussia had already sought the approval of the French Emperor Napoleon III for the undertaking since France was also seeking to acquire colonies in East Asia at that time Since French interests focused on Vietnam not Formosa Prussia could seek to acquire the island A Prussian naval expedition which departed Germany at the end of 1859 was tasked with concluding trade treaties in Asia for Prussia and the other states of the Zollverein and with occupying Formosa However this task was not carried out due to the limited strength of the expedition forces and because they did not wish to preclude a trade treaty with Qing China In a cabinet order of 6 January 1862 the expedition s ambassador Friedrich Albrecht zu Eulenburg was released from carrying out the part of his task concerned with identification of overseas settlements suitable for Prussian settlement Despite this one ship from the expedition the Thetis was sent to Patagonia in South America to investigate its prospects as a colony since the Prussian naval command in particular were interested in the establishment of a naval strong point on the South American coast The Thetis had already reached Buenos Aires which the commander of the ship decided to return to Germany due to the exhaustion of the men after the year long expedition and the need for repairs to the ship 11 Bismarck s rejection of colonization 1862 1871 Edit nbsp Woermann Linie factory in Cameroon From the 1830s German shipping participated in trade with Africa and established factories there From the 1850s trade and plantation agriculture were undertakend by German companies in the South Seas Some of these economic enterprises eventually formed the basis for the regions conversion into German colonies 12 After the Second Schleswig War in 1864 colonialist societies in Prussia aspired to take possession of the Nicobar islands which had previously been in Danish possession 13 For its part Denmark unsuccessfully proposed to exchange the Danish West Indies for some of the lost territory in Schleswig in 1865 In 1866 and then again in 1876 Jamal ul Azam Sultan of the Sulu Islands located between Borneo and the Philippines offered to place his islands under Prussian and then Imperial German control but both times he was rebuffed 14 Ahmad ibn Fumo Bakari the Sultan of Wituland asked the Prussian traveler Richard Brenner de to establish a Prussian protectorate over his lands but this request was never considered in Berlin 15 In the 1867 constitution of the North German Confederation article 4 1 declared colonization as one of the areas under the oversight of the Confederation which remained the case in the Imperial constitution established in 1871 In 1867 8 Otto von Bismarck dispatched the warship Augusta to the Caribbean to show the flag of the North German Confederation At the personal urging of Prince Adalbert the commander of the North German Federal Navy and without Bismarck s knowledge the commander of the Augusta Franz Kinderling de conducted negotiations with Jose Maria Castro Madriz President of Costa Rica with a view to establishing a naval base at Puerto Limon Bismarck rejected the acquisition due to the American Monroe Doctrine This desire to avoid antagonising the United States also led him to reject a Dutch offer to establish a naval base on the Dutch island of Curacao 16 In 1868 Bismarck made his opposition to any colonial acquisitions clear in a letter to the Prussian Minister of War Albrecht von Roon 17 On the one hand the benefits which one might derive from colonies for the Motherland s trade and industry are mostly illusory Then the costs which the foundation maintenance and especially the establishment of claims to colonies entail very often exceed the utility which the Motherland gets from them entirely apart from the fact that it is difficult to justify placing significant tax burdens on the whole nation for the benefit of individual commercial and industrial interests On the other hand is not sufficiently developed to be able to undertake the task of firmly protecting distant states He also repeatedly stated I am no man for colonies 18 The policy of the North German Confederation at this time focussed on the acquisition of individual naval bases not colonies With these it would be able to use gunboat diplomacy to protect the global trade interests of the Confederation through a kind of informal imperialism In 1867 it was decided to establish five overseas bases Accordingly in 1868 land was bought in Yokohama in Japan for a German naval hospital which remained in operation until 1911 In 1869 the East Asian Station Ostasiatische Station was established there by the navy as the first overseas base with a permanent presence of German warships Until the German Empire s acquisition of Qingdao in China as a military port in 1897 Yokohama remained the base of the German fleet in East Asia It later proved useful following the acquisition of colonies in the Pacific and in Kiaochow 19 In 1869 the Rhenish Missionary Society which had been established in southwestern Africa for several decades asked King William of Prussia for protection and suggested the establishment of a naval station at Walvis Bay William was very interested in this suggestion but the matter was forgotten following the outbreak of the Franco Prussian War 20 Debate and tentative steps under the new German Empire 1871 1878 Edit nbsp Kladderadatsch caricature 1884 Bismarck sits atop the globe smoking a long pipe and reading a book entitled Social Reforms while personifications of Britain France Russia and other nations quarrel below The title reads The South Seas are the Mediterranean of the Future and the caption says I m fine with the others keeping themselves busy down there Then there will finally be peace up here A French proposal after the Franco Prussian War to hand over the French colony of Cochinchina instead of Alsace Lorraine was rejected by Bismarck and a majority of the delegates in the North German Reichstag in 1870 After German Unification in 1871 Bismarck maintained his earlier position During the 1870s colonialist propaganda achieved increasing public profile in Germany In 1873 the African Society in Germany de was established which considered exploration of Africa its main function In 1878 the foundation of the Central Society for Commercial Geography and Promotion of German Interests Abroad de was established which sought to acquire colonies for Germany and in 1881 West German Society for Colonization and Export de was founded which included the acquisition of agricultural and commercial colonies for the German Empire in its founding statute In 1882 the first Society for German Colonization de was established which was a lobby group for colonialist propaganda In 1887 the competing Society for German Colonization was established with the goal of actually undertaking colonization The two societies merged in 1887 into the German Colonial Society Generally four arguments were advanced in favor of the acquisition of colonies 21 Once developed colonies would offer captive markets for German industrial products and thus provide a substitute for the decreasing consumer demand in Germany following the Panic of 1873 Colonies would provide a space for the German diaspora so that they would not be lost to the nation Since the diaspora had mainly emigrated to English speaking areas up to this point the prominent colonialist Wilhelm Hubbe Schleiden de held that if they were allowed to leave the Anglo Saxon race would irretrievably overtake the German one demographically Germany had as the theologian Friedrich Fabri de put it a cultural mission to spread its supposedly superior culture across the globe The acquisition of colonies provided a possible solution for the Social Question workers would commit themselves to an absorbing national task and abandon social democracy Through this and through the emigration of the overly rebellious masses to the colonies the internal unity of the nation would be strengthened Moreover German public opinion in the late 19th century viewed colonial acquisitions as a true indication of having achieved full nationhood 22 and eventually arrived at an understanding that prestigious African and Pacific colonies went hand in hand with dreams of a High Seas Fleet citation needed Bismarck remained opposed to these arguments and preferred an informal commercial imperialism in which German companies carried out profitable trade with areas outside Europe and made economic inroads without the occupation of territories or the construction of states 23 Bismarck and many deputies in the Reichstag had no interest in making colonial conquests merely to acquire square miles of territory 24 As a result the first colonial enterprises abroad were extremely hesitant a Treaty of Friendship between the German Empire and Tonga de was signed in 1876 which provided for the establishment of a coal station on the Tongan island of Vavaʻu guaranteeing all usage rights of the specified area to the German Empire but leaving the King of Tonga s sovereignty untouched 25 No actual colonization occurred On 16 July 1878 the commander of the SMS Ariadne Bartholomaus von Werner de occupied Falealili and Saluafata on the Samoan island of Upolu in the name of the Empire The German occupation of these places was revoked in January 1879 with the conclusion of a treaty of friendship between the local rulers and Germany 26 On 19 November 1878 von Werner established a treaty with the leaders of Jaluit Atoll and the Ralik islands of Lebon and Letahalin granting privileges like the exclusive right to establish a coal station An official German colony in the Marshall Islands was only established in 1885 27 Von Werner also acquired a harbor on the islands of Makada and Mioko in the Duke of York Islands in December 1878 which would become a component part of the future protectorate of German New Guinea in 1884 28 On 20 April 1879 the commander of the SMS Bismarck Karl August Deinhard de and the German Consul for the South Seas Islands Gustav Godeffroy Junior established a treaty of commerce and friendship with the government of Huahine one of the Society Islands which granted the German fleet the right to anchor at all harbors on the island among other things 29 Establishment of the empire 1884 1890 Edit nbsp Cartoon on Bismarck s colonial policy The new crinoline The caption reads Must I then participate in the fashion Have courage good lady Even if you are a bit embarrassed by the novel to start with it will give you a brilliant appearance on the outside At left in the background the German Centrist Ludwig Windthorst is depicted as a governess Engraving by Gustav Heil for the satirical magazine Berliner Wespen 13 March 1885Although Bismarck remained as contemptuous of all colonial dreams as ever 30 in 1884 he consented to the acquisition of colonies by the German Empire in order to protect trade safeguard raw materials and export markets and to take advantage of opportunities for capital investment among other reasons 31 In the very next year Bismarck shed personal involvement when he abandoned his colonial drive as suddenly and casually as he had started it as if he had committed an error in judgment that could confuse the substance of his more significant policies 32 Indeed in 1889 Bismarck tried to give German South West Africa away to the British It was he said a burden and an expense and he would like to saddle someone else with it 33 Following 1884 Germany invaded several territories in Africa German East Africa including present day Burundi Rwanda and the mainland part of Tanzania German South West Africa present day Namibia German Cameroon including parts of present day Cameroon Gabon Congo Central African Republic Chad and Nigeria and Togoland present day Togo and parts of Ghana Germany was also active in the Pacific annexing a series of islands that would be called German New Guinea part of present day Papua New Guinea and several nearby island groups The northeastern region of the island of New Guinea was called Kaiser Wilhelmsland the Bismarck Archipelago to the islands east also contained two larger islands named New Mecklenburg and New Pomerania They also acquired the Northern Solomon Islands These islands were given the status of protectorate 6 Bismarck moves towards a colonial policy 1878 1883 Edit The shift in Bismarck s policy on the acquisition of colonies began as part of his 1878 Schutzzollpolitik de policy on the protection of the German economy from foreign competition The beginning of his colonial policy in connection with the Schutzzollpolitik 34 was the acquisition of Samoa where there were significant German economic interests In June 1879 as Imperial Chancellor he acknowledged the Treaty of Friendship 35 agreed between the Samoan chiefs and the German consul in Samoa in January 1879 with the result that the consul assumed control of the administration of the city of Apia on the island of Upolu along with the consuls of Britain and America 36 In the 1880s Bismarck would unsuccessfully attempt to annex Samoa several times 37 The western Samoan islands which included Apia the main city became a German colony in 1899 In April 1880 Bismarck actively intervened in domestic politics in favor of colonial matters when he presented the Samoa Bill to the Reichstag It had been endorsed by the Federal Council but was rejected by the Reichstag The bill would have provided German financial support to a private German colonial trade company that had fallen into difficulties In May 1880 Bismarck asked the banker Adolph von Hansemann to produce a report on German colonial goals in the Pacific and the possibility of enforcing them Hansemann submitted his Memorandum on Colonial Aspirations in the South Seas to Bismarck in September of the same year The proposed territorial acquisitions were almost all taken or claimed as colonies four years later 38 Those Pacific territories that were claimed in 1884 but not taken were finally brought under German colonial administration in 1899 Significantly Hausemann was a founding member of the New Guinea Consortium for the acquisition of colonies in New Guinea and the Pacific in 1882 In November 1882 the Bremen based tobacco merchant Adolf Luderitz contacted the Foreign Office and requested protection for a trade station south of Walvis Bay on the southwest African coast In February and November 1883 he asked the British government whether the United Kingdom would provide protection to Luderitz s trade station Both times the British government refused 39 From March 1883 Adolph Woermann a Hamburg bulkgoods trader shipowner and member of the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce engaged in extremely confidential negotiations with the Foreign Office which was headed by Bismarck for the acquisition of a colony in West Africa The reason for this was the fear of tariffs that Hamburg traders might have to pay if the whole of West Africa were to come under British or French control Finally a secret request from the Chamber of Commerce to Bismarck for the establishment of a colony in West Africa was submitted to Bismarck on 6 July 1883 stating that through such acquisitions German trade in Trans Atlantic lands could only be given a firmer position and a surer support while without political protection trade cannot now thrive and progress 40 After this in March 1883 the Sierra Leone Convention between the United Kingdom and France was published in which the two countries spheres of interest were laid out without consideration of other trading nations In response the German government asked the senates of the cities of Lubeck Bremen and Hamburg for their opinions In their answer the Hamburg merchants demanded the acquisition of colonies in West Africa In December 1883 Bismarck let Hamburg known that an Imperial commissioner would be sent to West Africa to secure the safety of German trade and to conclude a treaty with independent Negro states A warship the SMS Sophie would be sent to provide military protection Additionally Bismarck requested suggestions on this plan and asked for Adolph Woermann s advice personally on what instructions should be given to the Imperial commissioner In March 1884 Gustav Nachtigal was named as the Imperial Commissioner for the West African Coast and set sail for West Africa in the SMS Mowe 41 42 Colonization under Bismarck 1884 1888 Edit nbsp Luderitz Bay around 1900 the first colonial acquisition of the German Empire nbsp SMS Olga during the bombardment of Hickorytown Douala Cameroon December 1884 nbsp German colonies in Africa and Papua New Guinea in 1885The year 1884 marks the beginning of actual German colonial acquisitions building on the overseas possessions and rights that had been acquired for the German Empire since 1876 In one year Germany s holdings became the third largest colonial empire after the British and French empires Following the British model Bismarck placed many possessions of German merchants under the protection of the German empire He took advantage of a period of foreign peace to begin the colonial experiment which he remained skeptical of The transition to official acceptance of colonialism and to colonial government thus occurred during the last quarter of Bismarck s tenure of office 43 First Adolf Luderitz s trading post in the Bay of Angara Pequena Luderitz Bay and the surrounding hinterland Luderitzland de was placed under the protection of the German Empire in April 1884 as German South West Africa In July Togoland and Adolph Woermann s possessions in Cameroon followed then the northeastern section of New Guinea Kaiser Wilhelmsland and the neighboring islands the Bismarck Archipelago In January 1885 the German flag was raised at Kapitai and Koba on the west African coast In February imperialist and man of action Carl Peters accumulated vast tracts of land for his Society for German Colonization emerging from the bush with X marks affixed by unlettered tribal chiefs on documents for some 60 thousand square miles of the Zanzibar Sultanate s mainland property 44 which became German East Africa Such exploratory missions required security measures that could be solved with small private armed contingents recruited mainly in the Sudan and usually led by adventurous former military personnel of lower rank Brutality hanging and flogging prevailed during these land grab expeditions under Peters control as well as others as no one held a monopoly in the mistreatment of Africans 45 46 and in April 1885 the brothers Clemens and Gustav Denhardt acquired Wituland in modern Kenya With this the first wave of German colonial acquisitions was largely completed The raising of German flags on Pacific islands claimed by Spain between August and October 1885 sparked the Carolines Crisis in which Germany ultimately backed down In October 1885 the Marshall Islands were also claimed and finally several of the Solomon Islands in October 1886 In 1888 Germany ended the civil war on Nauru and annexed the island Causes Edit The causes of Bismarck s sudden shift to a policy of colonial acquisition remain a matter of controversy among historians There are two dominant schools of thought one which focusses on German domestic politics and one which focusses on foreign affairs In terms of internal politics the key aspect is the public pressure which led to the development of a Colonial fever Kolonialfieber among the German populace Although the colonial movement was not very strong institutionally it succeeded in bringing its position into the public debate 47 A memorandum authored by Adolph Woermann and sent to Bismarck by the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce on 6 July 1883 is considered to have been particularly important in this respect 48 The approach of the 1884 German federal election and Bismarck s desire to strengthen his own position and bind the National Liberal Party which supported colonialism to himself have also been proposed as domestic factors in the adoption of the colonial policy 49 Hans Ulrich Wehler advanced the social imperialism thesis which holds that the colonial expansion served to divert social tensions created by economic crisis to the foreign sphere and helped to reinforce Bismarck s authority 50 The so called Crown prince thesis holds that Bismarck was attempting to deliberately worsen the German relationship with the United Kingdom before the anticipated succession of the anglophile Frederick III to the German throne in order to prevent him from instituting liberal English style policies 51 In terms of foreign policy the decision to colonize is seen as an extension of the concept of the European balance of power to a global context Participating in the Scramble for Africa would also reinforce its position as one of the Great Powers 52 Improving relations with France through a colonial entente that would divert French attention from revanchism related to Alsace Lorraine which had been annexed by Germany in 1871 has also been seen as a motive 53 Company land acquisitions and stewardship Edit It is no longer believed that the initiation of colonial expansion represented a radical reversal of Bismarck s politics The liberal imperialist ideal of an overseas policy grounded in private economic initiatives which he had held from the beginning was not changed much by placing German merchants possessions under the protection of the Empire 54 nbsp The Congo conference 1884 1885 in Berlin laid the basis for the Scramble for Africa the colonial division of the continent As Bismarck was converted to the colonial idea by 1884 he favored chartered company land management rather than establishment of colonial government due to financial considerations 55 He used official letters of protection to transfer the commerce and administration of individual German protectorates to private companies The administration of these areas was assigned to the German East Africa Company 1885 1890 the German Witu Company 1887 1890 the German New Guinea Company 1885 1899 and the Jaluit Gesellschaft de in the Marshall Islands 1888 1906 Bismarck would have liked the German colonies in west Africa and southwest Africa to be administered in this way as well but neither the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft fur Sudwestafrika de nor the Syndicate for West Africa 56 were willing to take on the role nbsp Cotton transport in Togo c 1900 Coffee cacao cotton and products from the coconut palm were pretty much the only goods produced for the German and international markets in Togo as in the other German tropical colonies These areas were brought into German possession with extremely unequal treaties following demonstrations of military power Indigenous rulers ceded vast areas which they often had no legal claim to in exchange for vague promises of protection and laughably low purchase prices Details of the treaties often remained unclear to them due to the language barrier They engaged with these deals however because the long negotiations with the colonizers and the ritual act of signing a treaty enormously enhanced their authority These treaties were approved by the German government which granted complete authority without oversight to the colonial companies while retaining for itself only ultimate sovereignty and a few unspecified rights to intervene In this way state financial and administrative engagement with the colonies was kept to a minimum 57 However this strategy failed within a few years The poor financial situation of almost all of the protectorates as well as the precarious security situation indigenous revolts broke out in South West Africa and East Africa in 1888 while in Cameroon and Togo border conflicts with the neighboring British colonies were feared and in general the demands of efficient administration overwhelmed the colonial companies compelled Bismarck and his successors to implement direct and formal rule in all the colonies 58 Although temperate zone cultivation flourished the demise and often failure of tropical low land enterprises contributed to changing Bismarck s view He reluctantly acquiesced to pleas for help to deal with revolts and armed hostilities by often powerful rulers whose lucrative slaving activities seemed at risk German native military forces initially engaged in dozens of punitive expeditions to apprehend and punish freedom fighters at times with British assistance 59 The author Charles Miller offers the theory that the Germans had the handicap of trying to colonize African areas inhabited by aggressive tribes 60 whereas their colonial neighbors had more docile peoples to contend with At that time the German penchant for giving muscle priority over patience contributed to continued unrest Several of the African colonies remained powder kegs throughout this phase and beyond 43 Halt to colonial acquisitions 1888 1890 Edit After 1885 Bismarck opposed further colonial acquisitions and maintained his policy focus on maintaining good relationships with the Great Powers of England and France In 1888 when the journalist Eugen Wolf urged him to acquire further colonies for Germany so that it would not fall behind in the scramble with the other Great Powers for colonies which he understood in a social Darwinian sense Bismarck replied that his priority was rather the protection of the recently won national unity which he considered to be under threat due to Germany s central location 61 Your map of Africa is very pretty but my map of Africa lies in Europe Here is Russia here is France and we are in the middle That is my map of Africa In 1889 Bismarck considered withdrawing Germany from colonial policy wishing to entirely end Germany s activities in East Africa and Samoa according to eyewitnesses It was further reported that Bismarck wanted nothing more to do with the administration of the colonies and intended to hand them over to the admiralty In May 1889 Bismarck offered to sell the German possessions in Africa to the Italian Prime Minister Francesco Crispi who countered with an offer to sell Italy s colonies to Germany 62 Bismarck also found the colonies useful as bargaining chips Thus at the Congo Conference held in Berlin from 1884 to 1885 he divied Africa up between the Great Powers In 1884 a treaty was concluded in the name of Luderitz with the Zulu king Dinuzulu which would have given Germany a claim to St Lucia Bay in Zululand However the claim was dropped as part of a concession to Britain in May 1885 63 along with a claim to Pondoland Also in 1885 Germany waived its claim to the west African territories of Kapitai and Koba and Mahinland in favor of France and Britain respectively In 1886 Germany and Britain agreed on the boundaries of their spheres of interest in East Africa After Bismarck had ended the policy of colonial acquisition in March 1890 he concluded the Heligoland Zanzibar Treaty with Britain on 1 July 1890 in which Germany renounced all remaining claims north of German East Africa In this way he established a balance with Great Britain Renouncing the German claims to the Somali coast between Burgabo and Alula also improved relations with Italy one of Germany s partners in the Triple Alliance In exchange for this Germany acquired the Caprivi Strip which extended German South West Africa east to the Zambezi River it was hoped that the river would enable overland transport between German South West Africa and German East Africa In these circumstances further German colonial aspirations in South East Africa were brought to an end 64 German interest in African colonies was accompanied by a growth of scholarly interest in Africa In 1845 the orientalist Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer of Leipzig University and others founded the Deutsche Morgenlandische Gesellschaft The linguist Hans Stumme also of Leipzig researched African languages Leipzig established a professorship of Anthropology Ethnography and Pre history in 1901 Karl Weule who established an ethnological and biological determinist school of African research and a professorship for Colonial geography and colonial policy in 1915 The researcher Hans Meyer was director of the Institute for Colonial Geography In 1919 the Seminar for Colonial geography and colonial policy was established 65 The empire under Kaiser Wilhelm 1890 1914 EditKaiser Wilhelm II 1888 1918 was keen for Germany to expand its colonial holdings Bismarck s immediate successor in 1890 Leo von Caprivi was willing to maintain the colonial burden of what already existed but opposed new ventures 66 Others who followed especially Bernhard von Bulow as foreign minister and chancellor sanctioned the acquisition of further Pacific Ocean colonies and provided substantial treasury assistance to existing protectorates to employ administrators commercial agents surveyors local peacekeepers and tax collectors This accorded with the expansionistic policy and a forced upgrade of the Imperial German Navy Colonial acquisition became a serious factor in German domestic politics The German colonial society was joined in 1891 by the extremely nationalistic Pan German League In addition to the arguments previously made in support of colonialism it was now argued that Germany had a duty to end the slave trade in the colonies and free indigenous people from their Muslim enslavers These abolitionist demands with their clear anti Muslim bias turned the 1888 Arab revolt on the East African coast into a holy war 67 Pre eminent however was the matter of German national prestige and the belief that Germany was locked in a Social Darwinist competition with the other Great Powers in which Germany as a late comer had to claim her due share 68 Wilhelm himself lamented his nation s position as colonial followers rather than leaders In an interview with Cecil Rhodes in March 1899 he stated the alleged dilemma clearly Germany has begun her colonial enterprise very late and was therefore at the disadvantage of finding all the desirable places already occupied 69 Under the new Weltpolitik Global policy a place in the Sun was sought for the latecoming nation as the chancellor Bernhard von Bulow put it in a speech to the Reichstag on 6 December 1897 which entailed the possession of colonies and a right to have a say in other colonial matters 70 This policy focussed on national prestige sharply contrasted with the pragmatic colonial policy advanced by Bismarck in 1884 and 1885 Acquisitions after 1890 Edit nbsp The German leased territory of Kiautschou and the port of QingdaoAfter 1890 Germany succeeded in acquiring only relatively minor territories In 1895 concessions were acquired from Qing China in Hankau and Tientsin modern Wuhan and Tianjin Following the Juye Incident of 1 November 1897 in which two German missionaries from the Society of the Divine Word were murdered Kaiser Wilhelm dispatched the East Asia Squadron to occupy Jiaozhou Bay and its chief port Qingdao on the southern coast of the Shandong peninsula 71 dubious discuss This became the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory and the area within 50 km of Jiaozhou Bay became a Neutral Zone in which Chinese sovereignty was limited in favor of Germany Furthermore Germany received mining and railway concessions in Shandong province nbsp Borders of German New Guinea before in blue and after in red the 1899 German Spanish treatyThrough the German Spanish Treaty of 1899 Germany acquired the Caroline Islands Mariana Islands and Palau in Micronesia for 17 million gold marks Through the Tripartite Convention of 1899 the west part of the Samoan islands became a German protectorate Simultaneously the control of existing colonies was extended inland for example the kingdoms of Burundi and Rwanda were added to German East Africa 72 However from 1891 German efforts in this regard encountered sharp resistance in the Bafut Wars in Cameroon and the conflict with the Hehe in East AfricaOn 6 March 1901 as part of preparatory work by the Imperial postal service for laying a German underwater telegraph cable the colonial official Arno Senfft de took possession of Sonsorol island The next day he also claimed the islands of Merir and Pulo Anna followed on 12 April by the island of Tobi and the Helen Reef These islands were placed under the administration of German New Guinea 73 In 1900 the Imperial Navy attempted to lease the island of Langkawi from the Sultan of Kedah for fifty years through the Behn Meyer company based in Singapore The deal fell through when the English government intervened based on a secret 1897 treaty with Siam which gave England the right to veto any Siamese concessions to a third power so Kedah which was a vassal of the Bangkok government was prevented from loaning Langkawi to the German government 74 75 The Kaiser s attempt to acquire the Baja California peninsula from Mexico as another naval base for the German fleet in the Pacific also failed 76 nbsp NeukamerunDuring the Agadir Crisis in 1911 the German government attempted to get the whole of French Congo as compensation for German recognition of the French protectorate in Morocco In the end they were given parts of northwestern French Congo which were added to German Cameroon and dubbed Neukamerun This acquisitive German colonial policy led to the increasing isolation of Germany among the Great Powers seen in Germany as an encirclement 77 For the academic development of the colonies the Kolonialwirtschaftliches Komitee de was established in 1896 In 1898 the Deutsche Kolonialschule fur Landwirtschaft Handel und Gewerbe de was established in Witzenhausen to provide agricultural training to people for settlement in the colonies It is now part of the University of Kassel In 1900 the Institute for Naval and Tropical Medicine was established in Hamburg to train naval and colonial doctors Of the German colonies only Togoland and German Samoa became profitable and self sufficient the balance sheet for the colonies as a whole revealed a fiscal net loss for Germany 78 Despite this the leadership in Berlin committed the nation to the financial support maintenance development and defense of these possessions Anticolonial Resistance 1897 1905 Edit Main articles Herero Wars and Maji Maji Rebellion The forcefulness with which the German colonial rulers imposed their claim to control led to ever more revolts by the indigenous population 79 The native population was forced into unequal treaties by the German colonial governments This led to the local tribes and natives losing their influence and power and eventually forced some of them to become slave laborers The result was several military and genocidal campaigns by the Germans against the natives 80 Both the colonial authorities and settlers were of the opinion that native Africans were to be a lower class their land seized and handed over to settlers and companies while the remaining population was to be put in reservations the Germans planned to make a colony inhabited predominantly by whites a new African Germany 81 Since the Germans were materially and technologically superior but had only a minimal military presence the indigenous peoples largely adopted guerrilla tactics The German colonial forces reacted similarly to other cases of asymmetric warfare involving colonial powers they waged war against the whole population In a scorched earth strategy they destroyed villages prevented economic activity and withheld any protection against wild animals Through these actions they forced the population to flee into inhospitable regions where many starved to death Through this conscious strategy the Germans caused lasting changes to the whole landscape making it uninhabitable for decades 82 The most significant of these actions against local populations were reprisals against the Chinese following the Boxer Rebellion in 1901 1902 83 the Herero and Namaqua genocide in 1904 1905 and the suppression of the Maji Maji Rebellion in 1905 1907 nbsp A photograph of chained Herero and Nama prisoners during the genocide nbsp Battle of Mahenge Maji Maji rebellion painting by Friedrich Wilhelm Kuhnert 1908After the outbreak of a cattle disease in South West Africa in 1897 the Herero spread their surviving cattle out over the area of the colony However these new pastures had been bought by settlers who now claimed the Herero s cattle for themselves In 1904 the situation finally escalated into the revolt of the Herero and the Nama which the understaffed Imperial Schutztruppe for German South West Africa were not able to quell The German government therefore dispatched a naval expeditionary force and subsequently reinforcement Schutztruppe In total around 15 000 men under Lieutenant general Lothar von Trotha defeated the Herero forces in August 1904 at the Battle of Waterberg Von Trotha issued the so called extermination order Vernichtungsbefehl under which the surviving Herero were driven into the wilderness 1800 of the survivors had reached British Bechuanaland by the end of November 1904 while thousands more fled to the northernmost parts of South West Africa and into the desert The Herero population is estimated at 50 000 of which around half had died by 1908 84 The Nama suffered 10 000 deaths also around half of their population They had fought on the German side against the Herero until the end of 1904 85 This was the first genocide of the 20th century 86 87 88 89 The Maji Maji rebellion broke out in German East Africa in 1905 6 and its suppression led to an estimated 100 000 native deaths many from famine resulting from German scorched earth tactics The lack of any true war in Togoland led some in Europe to call it Germany s model colony 90 But it saw its own share of bloodshed The Germans used forced labor and harsh punishment to keep the Africans in line 90 To minimize dissent the German Colonial Press Law written 1906 1912 kept the pugnacious settler press under control with censorship and prohibition of unauthorized publications However in Togoland African writers avoided the law by publishing critical articles in the adjacent British Gold Coast Colony In the process they built an international network of sympathizers 91 Exposes followed in the print media throughout Germany of the Herero rebellions in 1904 in German South West Africa Namibia today where in military interventions between 50 and 70 of the Herero population perished known as the Herero and Namaqua Genocide 92 The subduing of the Maji Maji uprising in German East Africa in 1905 was prominently published The rejection of a supplementary budget to provide further funding for colonial conflicts at the end of 1906 led to the dissolution of the Reichstag and new elections 93 A wave of anti colonial feeling began to gather momentum in Germany and resulted in large voter turnouts in the so called Hottentot election for the Reichstag in January 1907 94 The conservative Bulow government barely survived but in January 1907 the newly elected Reichstag imposed a complete overhaul upon the colonial service 94 New colonial policies 1905 1914 Edit nbsp German Colonial Secretary Bernhard Dernburg 2nd from right on an inspection tour in East Africa with British officials at Nairobi in 1907 nbsp Port of Dar es Salaam German East Africa c 1910As a result of the colonial wars in South West Africa and East Africa which had been caused by poor treatment of native peoples it was considered necessary to change the German colonial administration in favor of a more scientific approach to the employment of the colonies that improved the lives of the people in them Therefore the highest authority in colonial administration the Colonial Department Kolonialabteilung was separated from the Foreign Office and in May 1907 it became its own ministry the Imperial Colonial Office Reichskolonialamt nbsp Tsingdao with German buildings c 1900The creator of the new colonial policy was a successful banker and private sector restructurer Bernhard Dernburg from Darmstadt who was placed in charge of the Colonial Department in September 1906 and retained the role as Secretary of State of the revamped Colonial Office until 1910 Entrenched incompetents were screened out and summarily removed from office and not a few had to stand trial Replacing the misfits was a new breed of efficient humane colonial civil servant usually the product of Dernburg s own creation the Colonial Institute at Hamburg 95 In African protectorates especially Togoland and German East Africa improbably advanced and humane administrations emerged 96 Dernburg went on tours of the colonies to learn about their problems first hand and find solutions Capital investments by banks were secured with public funds of the imperial treasury to minimize risk Dernburg as a former banker facilitated such thinking he saw his commission to also turn the colonies into paying propositions He oversaw large scale expansion of infrastructure Every African protectorate built rail lines to the interior 97 Dar es Salaam evolved into the showcase city of all of tropical Africa 98 Lome grew into the prettiest city in western Africa 99 and Qingdao in China was in miniature as German a city as Hamburg or Bremen 100 Whatever the Germans constructed in their colonies was made to last 98 Scientific and technical institutions for colonial purposes were established or expanded in order to develop the colonies on these terms Two of these the Hamburg Colonial Institute and the German Colonial School are predecessor organizations of the modern universities of Hamburg and Kassel Dernburg declared that the indigenous population in the protectorates was the most important factor in our colonies and this was affirmed by new laws and initiatives 95 Corporal punishment was abolished Every colony in Africa and the Pacific established the beginnings of a public school system 101 and every colony built and staffed hospitals 102 In some colonies native agricultural holdings were encouraged and supported 103 In January 1909 Derburg said The goal must be colonies closely bound to the Fatherland administratively independent intellectually self sufficient and healthy nbsp Railway station 1914 in Luderitz Namibia pictured in 2006Wilhelm Solf who was Colonial Secretary from 1911 until 1918 also undertook tours in Africa in 1912 and 1913 The resulting impressions informed his colonial plans which included an expansion of the powers of the governors and a ban on forced labor for Africans 95 As governor of Samoa he had referred to the islanders as unsere braunen Schutzlinge our brown charges who could be guided but not forced 104 Similarly Heinrich Schnee governor of East Africa from 1912 proclaimed that the dominant feature of my administration will be the welfare of the natives entrusted into my care 105 Solf also advocated a network of motorways in the colonies He secured support for this comparatively peaceful colonial policy instead of the highly militarized approach that had been taken up to this point from all parties in the Reichstag except for the right There were no further major revolts in the German colonies after 1905 and the economic efficiency of the overseas possessions rapidly increased as a result of these new policies and improvements in shipping especially the establishment of scheduled services with refrigerated holds increased the amount of agricultural products from the colonies exotic fruits and spices that were sold to the public in Germany Between 1906 and 1914 the production of palm oil and cocoa in the colonies doubled the rubber production of the African colonies quadrupled and the cotton exports from German East Africa increased tenfold The total trade between Germany and its colonies increased from 72 million marks in 1906 to 264 million marks in 1913 Due to this economic growth the income from colonial taxes and duties increased sixfold Instead of being dependent on financial support from Germany the colonies became or were on track to become financially independent By 1914 only German New Guinea Kiautschou and the African Schutztruppen were subsidized 106 The colonial economy was thriving and roads railways shipping and telegraph communications were up to the minute 96 The colonies were romanticized Geologists and cartographers explored what were then unmarked regions on European maps identifying mountains and rivers and demarcating boundaries Hermann Detzner and one Captain Nugent R A had charge of a joint project to demarcate the British and German frontiers of Cameroon which was published in 1913 107 Travelers and newspaper reporters brought back stories of black and brown natives serving German managers and settlers There were also suspicions and reports of colonial malfeasance corruption and brutality in some protectorates and Lutheran and Roman Catholic missionaries dispatched disturbing reports to their mission headquarters in Germany 108 Idealists often volunteered for selection and appointment to government posts the commercially minded to grow dividends at home for the Hanseatic trading houses and shipping lines Subsequent historians would commend German colonialism in those years as an engine of modernization with far reaching effects for the future 109 nbsp Postcards depicted romanticized images of natives and exotic locales such as this early 20th century card of the German colonial territory in New Guinea nbsp Colonial postcard from Qingdao c 1900End of the German colonial empire 1914 1918 EditConquest in World War I Edit nbsp Austrian lieutenant Paul Fiedler 110 bombarding a South African military camp at the railway station of Tschaukaib German South West Africa December 1914 nbsp General Paul von Lettow Vorbeck s troops defeat Portugal at Ngomano Portuguese East Africa on 25 November 1917 nbsp Paul von Lettow Vorbeck s force stops fighting the Allies on 25 November 1918 after the Armistice In the years before the outbreak of the World War British colonial officers viewed the Germans as deficient in colonial aptitude but whose colonial administration was nevertheless superior to those of the other European states 111 Anglo German colonial issues in the decade before 1914 were minor and both empires the British and German took conciliatory attitudes Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey considered still a moderate in 1911 was willing to study the map of Africa in a pro German spirit 112 Britain further recognized that Germany really had little of value to offer in territorial transactions however advice to Grey and Prime Minister H H Asquith hardened by early 1914 to stop the trend of what the advisors considered Germany s taking and Britain s giving 113 Once war was declared in late July 1914 Britain and its allies promptly moved against the colonies The public was informed that German colonies were a threat because Every German colony has a powerful wireless station they will talk to one another across the seas and at every opportunity they German ships will dash from cover to harry and destroy our commerce and maybe to raid our coasts 114 The British position that Germany was a uniquely brutal and cruel colonial power originated during the war it had not been said during peacetime 115 The German overseas Colonies began to fall one by one to the allied forces The first to go was Togoland to the British and to the French then the Cameroons to the allied forces Germany s colonies put up a stout fight but by 1916 Germany lost most of its colonies except German East Africa where a German force of General Paul von Lettow Vorbeck held out against the Allies until the end of the war In the Pacific Britain s ally Japan declared war on Germany in 1914 and quickly seized several of Germany s island colonies the Mariana Caroline and Marshall Islands with virtually no resistance One reason these colonies fell so easily is because of the departure of Admiral von Spee s fleet In other parts of the Pacific Western Samoa another German colony fell without a fight to a New Zealand force Later on an Australian invasion of Neu Pommern beat the Germans seizing the entire colony within a few weeks South Africa s J C Smuts now in Britain s small War Cabinet spoke of German schemes for world power militarization and exploitation of resources indicating Germany threatened western civilization itself While propaganda was said about both sides it was here in Africa where Germany saw a crushing defeat It was at Togoland where the Germans were quickly outnumbered leaving them to flee the capital which led to a large pursuit of German forces by allied armies leading to the eventual surrender of German forces on 26 August 1914 Smuts warnings were repeated in the press The idea took hold that they should not be returned to Germany after the war 116 Confiscation Edit Germany s overseas empire was dismantled following defeat in World War I With the concluding Treaty of Versailles Article 22 German colonies were transformed into League of Nations mandates and divided between Belgium the United Kingdom and certain British Dominions France and Japan with the determination not to see any of them returned to Germany a guarantee secured by Article 119 117 In Africa the United Kingdom and France divided German Kamerun Cameroons and Togoland Belgium gained Ruanda Urundi in northwestern German East Africa the United Kingdom obtained by far the greater landmass of this colony thus gaining the missing link in the chain of British possessions stretching from South Africa to Egypt Cape to Cairo and Portugal received the Kionga Triangle a sliver of German East Africa German South West Africa was taken under mandate by the Union of South Africa 118 In terms of the population of 12 5 million people in 1914 42 percent were transferred to mandates of Britain and its dominions 33 percent to France and 25 percent to Belgium 119 In the Pacific Japan gained Germany s islands north of the equator the Marshall Islands the Carolines the Marianas the Palau Islands and Kiautschou in China German Samoa was assigned to New Zealand German New Guinea the Bismarck Archipelago and Nauru 120 went to Australia as mandates 121 British placement of surrogate responsibility for former German colonies on white settler dominions was at the time determined to be the most expedient option for the British government and an appropriate reward for the Dominions having fulfilled their great and urgent imperial service through military intervention at the behest of and for Great Britain 122 It also meant that British colonies now had colonies of their own which was very much influenced at the Paris proceedings by W M Hughes William Massey and Louis Botha the prime ministers of Australia New Zealand and South Africa 123 The principle of self determination embodied in the League of Nations covenant was not considered to apply to these colonies and was regarded as meaningless 124 To allay President Woodrow Wilson s suspicions of British imperialism the system of mandates was drawn up and agreed to by the British War Cabinet with the French and Italians in tow 125 a device by which conquered enemy territory would be held not as a possession but as sacred trusts 124 But far from envisaging the eventual independence of the former German colonies Allied statesmen at the Paris Conference regarded 1919 as the renewal not the end of an imperial era 124 In deliberations the British War Cabinet had confidence that natives everywhere would opt for British rule however the cabinet acknowledged the necessity to prove that its policy toward the German colonies was not motivated by aggrandizement since the Empire was seen by America as a land devouring octopus 126 with a voracious territorial appetite 127 President Wilson saw the League of Nations as residuary trustee for the German colonies captured and occupied by rapacious conquerors 128 The victors retained the German overseas possessions and did so with the belief that Australian Belgian British French Japanese New Zealand Portuguese and South African rule was superior to Germany s 129 Several decades later during the collapse of the then existing colonial empires Africans and Asians cited the same arguments that had been used by the Allies against German colonial rule they now simply demanded to stand by themselves 130 Colonialism after 1918 Edit nbsp Stamp from 1921 Give Germany its colonies back In Germany after the First World War the general public opinion was that the seizure of the colonies had been unlawful and that Germany had a right to its colonies Nearly all the parties elected to the Weimar National Assembly on 19 January 1919 voted in favor of a resolution which demanded the return of the colonies on 1 March 1919 i e while the Paris Peace Conference was still in progress Only seven delegates from the USPD voted against it 131 The charge that Germany had failed to civilize the peoples under its control was seen as particularly outrageous this had played a central role in German colonialism s self legitimation This protest achieved nothing in the final version of the Treaty of Versailles Germany was required to give up all its colonies 132 With the exception of German Southwest Africa where some descendants of German settlers still live today the German Namibians all Germans were required to leave the colonies Weimar Republic Edit nbsp Colonial Memorial Day on 24 April 1924 at the Humboldt University of Berlin celebrating the 40th anniversary of the declaration of the Southwest African protectorate nbsp Notgeld of 1922 Give us our colonies back Samoa Even in the early phase of the Weimar Republic there were voices calling for the return of the colonies among them Konrad Adenauer who was then mayor of Cologne Adenauer was Deputy President of the German Colonial Society from 1931 to 1933 From 1924 there was a Colonial Office in the Federal Foreign Office directed by Edmund Bruckner the former Governor of Togo Bruckner s policy was that the return of Togo Cameroon and German East Africa were the most likely 133 In 1925 the Colonial Imperial Society Korag was established as an umbrella organization from which the Reichskolonialbund emerged in 1933 Also in 1925 Johannes Bell who had been Colonial Minister in the Scheidemann cabinet founded the Interparty Colonial Union which included members of the whole political spectrum from the Nazi party to the SPD 134 In 1925 some settlers also returned to their plantations in Cameroon which they had bought the previous year with financial support from the Foreign Office 135 136 In anticipation of the recovery of the colonies the Colonial Women s School of Rendsburg was founded in 1926 In 1931 an Institute for Foreign and Colonial Forestry was founded at the Royal Saxon Academy of Forestry The treaty of Versailles attributed war guilt to Germany but most Germans did not accept this and many saw the confiscation of the colonies by the Allies as a theft especially after the South African premier Louis Botha stated that all allegations which the Allies had published during the war about the German colonial empire were without exception baseless fabrications German colonial revisionists spoke of a Colonial Guilt Myth 137 138 139 Nazi period 1933 1945 Edit Chancellor Adolf Hitler s speeches sometimes did mention return of the lost colonies as a bargaining point but at all times his real target was Eastern Europe 140 141 In 1934 the Nazi party established its own Office of Colonial Policy which was led by Heinrich Schnee and then Franz Ritter von Epp and was a very active grass roots organization The Reichskolonialbund established in 1936 under Franz Ritter von Epp absorbed all colonial organizations and was meant to raise procolonial sentiments and build public interest in former German colonies However no new overseas colonial enterprises took place and with the onset of World War II in 1939 the organization entered a decline It was disbanded by decree in 1943 for activity irrelevant to the war Although it tolerated the colonialists the Nazi government focused on territorial gains inside Europe At no time did it negotiate or demand from London or Paris the return of any lost colony According to Willeke Sandler Between 1933 and 1943 Rudolf Hess Martin Borman and Joachim von Ribbentrop among others hindered colonialists publicity activities seeing them as representative of a discarded past and as irrelevant when compared with Eastern European Lebensraum 142 Federal Republic Edit nbsp West German vice minister of workfare Wilhelm Claussen left with Paul Armegee transport minister of Togo in Bonn 1961The former German colonies played no role in the politics of Post war Germany However individual west German politicians proposed undertaking late or postcolonial enterprises especially the management of trusts in Tanganyika or Togo 143 Even within the African freedom movement these suggestions co existed with calls for decolonization At the end of 1952 members of the Ewe people submitted in a memorandum to the United Nations Trusteeship Council proposing that the territories of German Togoland taken by the British and the French be reunited and led towards independence together 144 This initiative was not accepted In 1960 Adolf Friedrich zu Mecklenburg the final German governor of Togo was invited to Togo s independence celebrations by Sylvanus Olympio President of Togo 145 Efforts to revive the Colonial War League after the Second World War led to the establishment in Hamburg in 1955 of a Union of Former Colonial Troops ancestor of the current Traditional league of former colonial and overseas troops de The final remains of the Protectorate Law survived until the legal expiration of the Colonial Society in 1975 and fiscal adjustments in 1992 Colonial history continues to be commemorated by colonial monuments street names and buildings related to German colonial history In many places this has led to discussions about cultural memory and to calls for modification or renaming 146 Representatives of the Herero and Nama whose ancestors were killed in their thousands in German administered Southwest Africa between 1904 and 1908 having taken legal action against Germany in the American courts In January 2017 a class action against the German government was submitted to a court in New York The statement of claim speaks of over 100 000 fatalities In March 2017 it became known that the Namibian government was considering an action against Germany in the International Court of Justice in The Hague It was said that damages were sought in the region of 30 billion dollars 147 The publication of edited volumes on the themes of colonialism 2012 and German Colonial History 2019 by the Federal Agency for Civic Education aimed to bring about revived awareness of colonialism in political legal and psycological spheres to a wider group of readers and scholars as the editor Asiye Ozturk put it 148 149 In 2015 Heinrich Heine University in Dusseldorf and the University of Dschang in Cameroon established a joint research project on Colonial links which culminated in an exhibition in Dusseldorf in 2017 150 151 After that the exhibition traveled to Dschang and to various German cities where it was augmented with aspects of local relevance Finally a volume on the exhibition was published in 2019 152 153 Administration and colonial policies EditColonial administration Edit nbsp Political diagram of the German Empire and its colonies nbsp The way to the governor s palace in Togo 1904 nbsp Hendrik Witbooi with the German governor Theodor Leutwein of South West Africa toasting to each other 1896 nbsp Askari troops in German East Africa c 1906Between 1890 and 1907 the uppermost leadership of the empire s protectorates Schutzgebiete was the Colonial Division Kolonialabteilung of the Foreign Office Auswartiges Amt which was headed by the Imperial Chancellor In 1907 the Colonial Division was separated from the Foreign Office and became its own ministry Amt called the Imperial Colonial Office Reichskolonialamt with Bernhard Dernburg as its state secretary By an Imperial decree of 10 October 1890 the Colonial Council Kolonialrat was placed alongside the Colonial Division It contained representatives of the Colonial Societies and experts appointed by the Chancellor The German treaty port of Kiautschou was administered by the Imperial Naval Office Reichsmarineamt not the Foreign Office or the Colonial Office The highest legal authority for the colonies was the Reichsgericht Imperial Court of Justice in Leipzig The legal situation in the colonies was first regulated by the 1886 law concerning the legal relationships of the German protectorates which became the Protectorate Law de Schutzgebietsgesetz in 1900 after further changes 154 It introduced German law in the German colonies for Europeans through consular jurisdiction The Consular Jurisdiction Law Konsulargerichtsbarkeitsgesetz of 1879 had granted German consuls overseas jurisdiction over German citizens in specific circumstances The Protectorate Law specified that the regulations on consular jurisdiction would also apply in the colonies In so far as they were relevant to consular jurisdiction therefore various important legal provisions of civil law criminal law legal procedure and due process also came into force in the colonies 155 Alongside this over time further special provisions of colonial law were established For indigenous people in the colonies the Kaiser initially held all legislative power Over the following years the Imperial Chancellor and other officials empowered by him were also given the authority to regulate the administration jurisdiction policing etc of the colonies Thus in the German colonies there was at a fundamental level a dual legal structure with different laws for the Europeans and the indigenous people 156 No colonial criminal law code was codified during German colonial rule 157 Administration of individual colonies Edit At the top of the administration of each colony was the Governor who was aided by a chancellor as deputy and assistance in legal matters secretaries and other officials The districts Bezirke the largest administrative subdivisions of a colony were administered by a District Officer Bezirksamtmann In turn a district was divided into district branches Bezirksnebenstellen Another form of administration in the colonies was the Resident Residentur These were comparable to the districts in size but the native rulers were allowed far more power in residencies than in districts helping to keep the costs of German administration as low as possible Schutztruppen were stationed in the colonies of Cameroon Southwest Africa and East Africa for internal military security The police forces in the colonies were police troops Polizeitruppen organized on military lines In the Kiautschou Leased Bay Territory which was under the control of the German Imperial Naval Office marines of the 3rd Sea Battalion were stationed as police 158 In the colonies there were Protectorate Courts Schutzgebietsgerichte modeled on consular courts Jurisdiction over indigenous peoples especially in criminal cases was invested in the colonial officials in the colonies In noncriminal matters indigenous authorities were granted jurisdiction over their communities and could render judgment in accordance with local law 159 For Germans and other Europeans the district court Bezirksgericht had jurisdiction in first instance and there was a right of appeal to an upper court Obergericht In Togo the size of the European population made an upper court impractical so the upper court of Kamerun also acted as the appellate court for Togo 160 German colonial population Edit The Pennsylvania Dutch who emigrated to America in the 17th and 18th centuries were religious refugees from the Thirty Years War which devastated the German states 1616 1648 rather than colonial settlers Germantown Pennsylvania was founded in 1684 and 65 000 Germans landed in Philadelphia alone between 1727 and 1775 and more at other American ports More than 950 000 Germans immigrated to the US in the 1850s and 1 453 000 in the 1880s but these were personal migrants unrelated to the German Empire created 1871 and later colonial plans The Empire s colonies were primarily commercial and plantation regions and did not attract large numbers of German settlers 161 The vast majority of German emigrants chose North America as their destination and not the colonies of 1 085 124 emigrants between 1887 and 1906 1 007 574 headed to the United States 161 When the imperial government invited the 22 000 soldiers mobilized to subdue the Hereros to settle in German South West Africa and offered financial aid only 5 accepted 161 The German colonial population numbered 5 125 in 1903 and about 23 500 in 1913 162 The German pre World War I colonial population consisted of 19 696 Germans in Africa and the Pacific colonies in 1913 including more than 3 000 police and soldiers and 3 806 in Kiaochow 1910 of which 2 275 were navy and military staff 162 In Africa 1913 12 292 Germans lived in Southwest Africa 4 107 in German East Africa and 1 643 in Cameroon 162 In the Pacific colonies in 1913 there were 1 645 Germans 162 After 1905 a ban on marriage was enacted forbidding mixed couples between German and native population in South West Africa and after 1912 in Samoa 163 After World War I the military and undesired persons were expelled from the German protectorates In 1934 the former colonies were inhabited by 16 774 Germans of whom about 12 000 lived in the former Southwest African colony 162 Once the new owners of the colonies again permitted immigration from Germany the numbers rose in the following years above the pre World War I total 162 Relationship between German and indigenous populations Edit nbsp German colonial leader in Togo c 1885Legal inequality Edit The relationship between the Germans and the indigenous populations in the German colonies was characterized by legal and social inequality as in all the other colonial empires There were two separate legal systems and people were assigned to one or the other on the basis of racial criteria The whites i e the German and European inhabitants of the colonies formed a small highly privileged minority rarely reaching even 1 of a colony s total population 164 They enjoyed all the rights privileges and duties of normal German law Non German Europeans were legally their equals 165 The 13 million or so natives of the German colonial empire did not become German citizens in 1913 when German citizenship was first introduced They were not considered Imperial citizens but only subjects or wards of Germany German laws applied to them only if explicitly stated by the individual statute In particular they were shut out of the court system They had no right of appeal against decisions of the colonial authorities or first instance judgments For the 10 000 or so people of Arab and Indian descent who lived in German East Africa the governors had the ability to issue special regulations 166 According the Protectorate Law however it was possible for natives to be granted Imperial citizenship and to pass that citizenship on to their children The cause of this was the fact that the children of mixed marriages automatically received German citizenship This was perceived as a threat to the German body politic and its racial purity 167 As sexual relationships between the population groups had grown increasingly common the colonies gradually banned civil marriage between whites and natives from 1905 Extra marital sexual relationships were socially unacceptable as leading to Kaffirization Verkaffirung In 1912 the Reichstag held a debate about the possibility of miscegenation resulting in most parties agreeing that miscegenation should be legalized However no law on this was ever enacted 168 The ban remained in effect until the end of the German Empire Evangelism education and healthcare Edit nbsp School of the North German Missionary Society in Togo 1899The German colonizers conceived of the indigenous populations as children people at a lower level of development who had to be protected educated and raised up 169 German missionary societies were already concerning themselves with the education and conversion of overseas populations in the 1820s Protestant organizations included the Berlin Missionary Society Rhenish Missionary Society Leipzig Missionary Society de and the North German Missionary Society 170 After the Kulturkampf had subsided Catholic missionary societies were allowed to operate in the colonies too 171 These missionary societies established stations in the colonies where they instructed the indigenous people in basic education modern agricultural techniques and Christianity They had substantial success since the breakdown of precolonial society which the German land seizures and colonial wars had engendered often brought a spiritual crisis with it and the indigenous people sought comfort and support from the god of the new rulers who appeared to have proven his superiority Since the goal of the missionaries was the conversion of the indigenous peoples and they emphasized the virtue of neighborly love they often had cause to protest against their abuse and exploitation by the colonial administration and plantation owners In order to support themselves and to model good behavior the missionaries themselves often had plantations which were dependent on the indigenous people s skill and willingness to work These goals often came into conflict The missionaries were generally rather tolerant regarding traditional customs and practices For example they often allowed polygamy which was widespread in Africa and the Pacific The exception to this was the Islamic culture of the East African coast which the missionaries strongly opposed 172 Medicine and science Edit In her African and South Seas colonies Germany established diverse biological and agricultural stations Staff specialists and the occasional visiting university group conducted soil analyses developed plant hybrids experimented with fertilizers studied vegetable pests and ran courses in agronomy for settlers and natives and performed a host of other tasks 105 Successful German plantation operators realized the benefits of systematic scientific inquiry and instituted and maintained their own stations with their own personnel who further engaged in exploration and documentation of the native fauna and flora 173 Research by bacteriologists Robert Koch and Paul Ehrlich and other scientists was funded by the imperial treasury and was freely shared with other nations More than three million Africans were vaccinated against smallpox 96 Medical doctors the world over benefited from pioneering work into tropical diseases and German pharmaceutical discoveries became a standard therapy for sleeping sickness and relapsing fever The German presence in Africa was vital for significant achievements in medicine and agriculture 98 By the late 1880s German physicians identified venereal disease as a public health threat to Germany and its colonies To fight it in Germany doctors used biopolitics to educate and regulate the bodies of likely victims Propaganda campaigns did not work well in the colonies so they imposed a much greater degree of supervision and coercion over targeted groups such as prostitutes 174 During the Herero genocide Eugen Fischer a German scientist came to the concentration camps to conduct medical experiments on race using children of Herero people and multiracial children of Herero women and German men as test subjects 175 Together with Theodor Mollison he also experimented upon Herero prisoners 176 Those experiments included sterilization injection of smallpox typhus as well as tuberculosis 177 The numerous cases of mixed offspring upset the German colonial administration which was concerned with maintaining racial purity 177 Eugen Fischer studied 310 multiracial children calling them Rehoboth bastards of lesser racial quality 177 Fischer also subjected them to numerous racial tests such as head and body measurements and eye and hair examinations In conclusion of his studies he advocated genocide of alleged inferior races stating that whoever thinks thoroughly the notion of race can not arrive at a different conclusion 177 Fischer s actions at the time considered scientific and his torment of the children were part of a wider history of abusing Africans for experiments and echoed earlier actions by German anthropologists who stole skeletons and bodies from African graveyards and took them to Europe for research or sale 177 An estimated 3000 skulls were sent to Germany for study In October 2011 after 3 years of talks the first skulls were due to be returned to Namibia for burial 178 Other experiments were made by Doctor Bofinger who injected Herero who were suffering from scurvy with various substances including arsenic and opium Afterward he researched the effects of these substances by performing autopsies on dead bodies 179 Social Darwinism Edit Further information Causes of World War I Social Darwinism Social Darwinism is the theory that human groups and races are subject to the same laws of natural selection as Charles Darwin had perceived in plants and animals in nature 180 According to numerous historians an important ideological component of German nationalism as developed by the intellectual elite was Social Darwinism 181 It gave an impetus to German assertiveness as a world economic and military power aimed at competing with France and the British Empire for world power German colonial rule in Africa 1884 1914 was an expression of nationalism and moral superiority that was justified by constructing an image of the natives as Other German colonization was characterized by the use of repressive violence in the name of culture and civilization Techniques included genocide in parts of Africa 182 Furthermore the wide acceptance among intellectuals of social Darwinism justified Germany s right to acquire colonial territories as a matter of the survival of the fittest according to historian Michael Schubert 183 184 nbsp Map showing the location of the various Duala ethnic groups of CameroonOn the other hand Germany s cultural missionary project boasted that its colonial programs were humanitarian and educational endeavors Colonial German physicians and administrators tried to make a case for increasing the native population in order to also increase their numbers of laborers Eugene Fischer an anthropologist at the University of Freiburg agreed with that notion saying that they should only be supported as necessary and as they prove to be useful Once their use is gone Europeans should allow free competition which in my Fischer s opinion means their demise 185 The Duala people a Bantu group in Cameroon readily welcomed German policies The number of German speaking Africans increased in four West African German colonies prior to 1914 The Duala leadership in 1884 placed the tribe under German rule Most converted to Protestantism and were educated along German lines Colonial officials and businessmen preferred them as inexpensive clerks to German government offices and firms in Africa 186 Legacy EditContinuity thesis Edit nbsp Map of Former German Colonies throughout History German Empire Colonies of the German Empire Prussian Brandenburg colonies Little Venice Controlled by a German firm In recent years scholars have debated the continuity thesis that links German colonialist brutalities to the treatment of Jews Roma Poles and Russians during World War II Some historians argue that Germany s role in southwestern Africa gave rise to an emphasis on racial superiority at home which in turn was used by the Nazis They argue that the limited successes of German colonialism overseas led to a decision to shift the main focus of German expansionism into Central and Eastern Europe with the Mitteleuropa plan German colonialism therefore turned to the European continent 187 While a minority view during the Kaiserzeit the idea developed in full swing under Erich Ludendorff and his political activity in the Baltic states Ukraine and Poland Subsequently after the defeat of Russia during World War I Germany acquired vast territories with the Treaty of Brest Litovsk and created several administrative regions like Ober Ost Here also the German settlement would be implemented and the whole governmental organization was developed to serve German needs while controlling the local ethnically diverse population While the African colonies were too isolated and not suitable for mass settlement of Germans areas in Central and Eastern Europe offered better potential for German settlement 188 Other scholars are skeptical and challenge the continuity thesis 189 Additionally however only one former colonial officer gained an important position in the Nazi administrative hierarchy 9 Impact Edit nbsp Examples of German language on signs in NamibiaUnlike other colonial empires such as the British French Portuguese or Spanish Germany left very few traces of its own language institutions or customs in its former colonies As of today no country outside Europe uses the German language as an official language although in Namibia German is a recognized national language and there are numerous German placenames and architectural structures in the country A small German ethnic minority also resides in the country List of German colonies as of 1912 EditSee also List of former German colonies German Empire Territory Capital Established Disestablished Area 1 Total population 1 German population 1 Current countriesKamerunKamerun Jaunde 1884 1920 495 000 km2 2 540 000 1 359 nbsp Cameroon nbsp Nigeria nbsp Chad nbsp Gabon nbsp Central African Republic nbsp Republic of the CongoTogolandTogo Bagida 1884 87 Sebeab 1887 97 Lome 1897 1916 1884 1920 87 200 km2 1 003 000 316 nbsp Ghana nbsp TogoGerman South West AfricaDeutsch Sudwestafrika Windhuk from 1891 1884 1920 835 100 km2 86 000 12 135 nbsp NamibiaGerman East AfricaDeutsch Ostafrika Bagamoyo 1885 1890 Dar es Salaam 1890 1916 Tabora 1916 temporary 190 1891 1920 995 000 km2 7 511 000 3 579 nbsp Burundi nbsp Kenya nbsp Mozambique nbsp Rwanda nbsp TanzaniaGerman New GuineaDeutsch Neu GuineaIncluding Imperial German Pacific Protectorates North Solomon Islands Marshall Islands Caroline Islands Northern Mariana Islands Finschhafen 1884 1891 Madang 1891 1899 Herbertshohe 1899 1910 Simpsonhafen 1910 1914 1884 1920 243 291 km2 601 000 665 nbsp Papua New Guinea nbsp Solomon Islands nbsp Palau nbsp Federated States of Micronesia nbsp Nauru nbsp Northern Mariana Islands nbsp Marshall IslandsGerman SamoaDeutsch Samoa Apia 1899 1920 2 570 km2 38 000 294 nbsp SamoaKiautschou Bay Leased TerritoryPachtgebiet Kiautschou Tsingtau 1897 1920 515 km2 200 000 400 nbsp ChinaTotal as of 1912 2 658 161 km2 11 979 000 18 748 22See also Edit nbsp German Empire portal nbsp History portalHistory of German foreign policy List of former German colonies German colonial projects before 1871 German colonization of the Americas German East Africa Company German New Guinea Company Brandenburger Gold Coast Imperial Colonial Office Reichskolonialbund Wilhelminism Duala people Cologne in the German colonial empireFootnotes Edit a b c d e Statistische Angaben zu den deutschen Kolonien dhm de in German Deutsches Historisches Museum Archived from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 29 September 2016 Sofern nicht anders vermerkt beziehen sich alle Angaben auf das Jahr 1912 Diese deutschen Worter kennt man noch in der Sudsee von Matthias Heine Archived 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Einst hatten die Deutschen das drittgrosste Kolonialreich Biskup Thomas Kohlrausch Martin Germany 2 Colonial Empire Credo Online Credo Reference Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2019 See North German Missionary Society Washusen p 61 a b Biskup Thomas Kohlrausch Martin Germany 2 Colonial Empire Credo Online Credo Reference Michael Frohlich Imperialismus Deutsche Kolonial und Weltpolitik 1880 1914 dtv Munchen 1994 ISBN 3 423 04509 4 pp 18 amp 22 Walter Nuhn Kolonialpolitik und Marine Die Rolle der Kaiserlichen Marine bei der Grundung und Sicherung des deutschen Kolonialreiches 1884 1914 Bernard amp Graefe Bonn 2002 p 27 a b Biskup Thomas Germany 2 Colonial empire Credo Reference John Wiley and Sons Ltd Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2019 Washausen p 67 114 the West and East Africa firms Lawrence Sondhaus Preparing for Weltpolitik German Sea Power Before the Tirpitz Era Naval Institute Press Annapolis 1997 p 68 Percy Ernst Schramm Deutschland und Ubersee Der deutsche Handel mit den anderen Kontinenten insbesondere Afrika von Karl V bis zu Bismarck Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Rivalitat im Wirtschaftsleben Georg Westermann Verlag Braunschweig 1950 Franz Theodor Maurer Die Nikobaren Colonial Geschichte und Beschreibung nebst motivirtem Vorschlage zur Colonisation dieser Inseln durch Preussen Carl Heymanns Verlag Berlin 1867 Percy Ernst Schramm Deutschland und Ubersee Der deutsche Handel mit den anderen Kontinenten insbesondere Afrika von Karl V bis zu Bismarck Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Rivalitat im Wirtschaftsleben Georg Westermann Verlag Braunschweig 1950 p 92 Hans Ulrich Wehler Bismarck und der Imperialismus fourth edition dtv Munchen 1976 ISBN 3 423 04187 0 pp 367 f Lawrence Sondhaus Preparing for Weltpolitik German Sea Power Before the Tirpitz Era Naval Institute Press Annapolis 1997 p 98 Michael Frohlich Imperialismus Deutsche Kolonial und Weltpolitik 1880 1914 dtv Munchen 1994 S 32 Taylor Bismarck The Man and the Statesman p 215 Cord Eberspacher Die deutsche Yangtse Patrouille Deutsche Kanonenbootpolitik in China im Zeitalter des Imperialismus 1900 1914 Verlag Dr Dieter Winkler Bochum 2004 p 24 Martha Mamozai Herrenmenschen Frauen im deutschen Kolonialismus Rowohlt Hamburg 1990 p 82 Winfried Speitkamp de Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 pp 18 f Hartmut Pogge Von Strandmann Domestic origins of Germany s colonial expansion under Bismarck Past amp Present 42 1969 140 159 online Archived 19 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hans Ulrich Wehler Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte Vol 3 Von der Deutschen Doppelrevolution bis zum Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges 1845 49 1914 C H Beck Munchen 1995 pp 980 f Reichstag deputy Friedrich Kapp stated in debate in 1878 that whenever there is talk of colonization he would recommend to keep pocketbooks out of sight even if the proposal is for the acquisition of paradise Washausen p 58 Freundschaftsvertrag zwischen dem Deutschen Reich und Tonga Wikisource Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Sudsee 1884 1914 Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2001 p 2 Norbert Berthold Wagner Die deutschen Schutzgebiete Erwerb Organisation und Verlust aus juristischer Sicht Nomos Baden Baden 2002 pp 94 96 Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Verwaltung Neuguineas 1884 1914 Archived 11 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Sudsee 1884 1914 Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2001 pp 3 and 6 Crankshaw Bismarck p 395 Washausen p 115 Crankshaw p 397 Taylor p 221 Helmut Bohme Probleme der Reichsgrundungszeit 1848 1879 Kiepenheuer amp Witsch Koln Berlin 1968 p 346 Klaus J Bade Friedrich Fabri und der Imperialismus in der Bismarckzeit Atlantis Verlag Freiburg 1975 p 198 Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Sudsee 1884 1914 Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2001 pp 649 and 694 Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Sudsee 1884 1914 Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2001 p 695 Hermann Joseph Hiery Die deutsche Sudsee 1884 1914 Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2001 pp 2 f Michael Frohlich Imperialismus Deutsche Kolonial und Weltpolitik 1880 bis 1914 dtv Munchen 1994 p 37 Klaus Jurgen Bade Friedrich Fabri und der Imperialismus in der Bismarckzeit Atlantis Verlag Freiburg 1975 pp 316 318 Harry R Rudin Germans in the Cameroons 1884 1914 A Case Study in Modern Imperialism Yale University Press New Haven 1938 S 34 39 Kurt Grobecker 325 Jahre Handelskammer Hamburg 1665 1990 Handelskammer Hamburg Hamburg 1990 S 79 81 a b Miller p 7 Miller Battle for the Bundu p 6 Miller p 10 German Colonialism A Short History Sebastian Conrad p 146 Cambridge University Press 2012 Horst Grunder Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien 5 Auflage Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2004 p 52 Horst Grunder da und dort ein junges Deutschland grunden Rassismus Kolonien und kolonialer Gedanke vom 16 bis zum 20 Jahrhundert dtv Munchen 1999 S 68 u o Karsten Linne Deutschland jenseits des Aquators Die NS Kolonialplanungen fur Afrika Ch Links Berlin 2008 S 12 Beate Althammer Das Bismarckreich 1871 1890 Schoningh Paderborn 2009 pp 228 f Hans Ulrich Wehler Bismarck und der Imperialismus Kiepenheuer und Witsch Koln 1969 Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte Vol 3 Von der Deutschen Doppelrevolution bis zum Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges 1845 49 1914 C H Beck Munchen 1995 pp 985 990 Beate Althammer Das Bismarckreich 1871 1890 Schoningh Paderborn 2009 pp 229 f Beate Althammer Das Bismarckreich 1871 1890 Schoningh Paderborn 2009 p 231 Horst Grunder Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien fifth edition Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2004 p 55 Hans Ulrich Wehler Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte Vol 3 Von der Deutschen Doppelrevolution bis zum Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges 1845 49 1914 C H Beck Munchen 1995 p 985 Grunder 2004 p 58 f Sebastian Conrad Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Beck Munchen 2008 p 23 Washausen p 116 Wolfgang J Mommsen Das Ringen um den nationalen Staat Die Grundung und der innere Ausbau des Deutschen Reiches unter Otto von Bismarck 1850 bis 1890 Vol 7 Part 1 Propylaen Berlin 1993 ISBN 3 549 05817 9 p 523 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 p 26 30 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 pp 30 35 Miller p 9 once the military command was able to harness this aggressiveness through training the German Askari forces of the Schutztruppe demonstrated that fierce spirit in their elan and war time performance Miller p 28 Hans Ulrich Wehler Bismarck und der Imperialismus fourth ed Munchen 1976 p 423 f Hans Ulrich Wehler Bismarck und der Imperialismus fourth ed Munchen 1976 pp 408 n 2 Santa Lucia in Meyers Grosses Konversations Lexikon Band 17 Leipzig 1909 p 587 Horst Grunder Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien 5 Auflage Ferdinand Schoningh Paderborn 2004 ISBN 3 8252 1332 3 pp 80 f www gkr uni leipzig de Washausen p 162 Horst Grunder Gott will es Eine Kreuzzugsbewegung am Ende des 19 Jahrhunderts Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht 28 1977 pp 210 224 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 S 35 f Louis 1963 Ruanda Urundi p 163 Michael Frohlich Imperialismus Deutsche Kolonial und Weltpolitik 1880 1914 dtv Munchen 1994 S 73 88 Esherick 1988 p 123 Helmut Strizek Geschenkte Kolonien Ruanda und Burundi unter deutscher Herrschaft Ch Links Berlin 2006 ISBN 3 86153 390 1 Roy M MacLeod Milton James Lewis Disease medicine and empire Perspectives on western medicine and the experience of the european expansion 1988 ISBN 0 415 00685 6 Khoo Salma Nasution More than Merchants A History of the German speaking Community in Penang 1800s 1940s Areca Books Penang 2006 pp 70 71 Tom Marks The British Acquisition of Siamese Malaya 1896 1909 White Lotus Huay Yai 1997 pp 25 26 33 Barbara W Tuchman The Zimmermann Telegramm Ballantine Books New York 1985 ISBN 0 345 32425 0 pp 27 f Klaus Hildebrand Deutsche Aussenpolitik 1871 1918 Enzyklopadie deutscher Geschichte Vol 2 Oldenbourg Munchen 1989 pp 35 38 Haupt Deutschlands Schutzgebiete p 85 Fabian Klose Koloniale Gewalt und Kolonialkrieg Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung 2016 accessed on 20 January 2021 Hull Isabel V Absolute destruction military culture and the practices of war in Imperial Germany pp 3ff A Dirk Moses Empire Colony Genocide Conquest Occupation and Subaltern Resistance in World History p 301 Susanne Kuss Kolonialkriege und Raum Militargeschichtliche Zeitschrift 73 Heft 2 2015 S 333 348 hier S 338 341 via De Gruyter Online Cohen Paul A History in Three Keys The Boxers As Event Experience and Myth Columbia University Press ISBN 0231106505 1997 pp 185 185 Bartholomaus Grill Kolonialgeschichte Gewisse Ungewissheiten in Der Spiegel 11 June 2016 Sebastian Conrad Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte second edition Beck Munchen 2012 p 53 Jurgen Zimmerer Joachim Zeller ed Volkermord in Deutsch Sudwestafrika Der Kolonialkrieg 1904 1908 in Namibia und seine Folgen Links Berlin 2003 ISBN 3 86153 303 0 Tilman Dedering The German Herero War of 1904 Revisionism of Genocide or Imaginary Historiography Journal of Southern African Studies Vol 19 No 1 1993 p 80 Dominik J Schaller Ich glaube dass die Nation als solche vernichtet werden muss Kolonialkrieg und Volkermord in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1904 1907 Journal of genocide research Vol 6 2004 ISSN 1462 3528 pp 395 430 at p 385 doi 10 1080 1462352042000265864 Reinhart Kossler Henning Melber Volkermord und Gedenken Der Genozid an den Herero und Nama in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1904 1908 In Irmtrud Wojak Susanne Meinl edd Volkermord Genozid und Kriegsverbrechen in der ersten Halfte des 20 Jahrhunderts Jahrbuch zur Geschichte und Wirkung des Holocaust Vol 8 Campus Frankfurt am Main 2004 pp 37 76 a b Lauman Dennis 2003 A Historiography of German Togoland or the Rise and Fall of a Model Colony History in Africa 30 195 211 Jeremy Sarkin and Carly Fowler Reparations for Historical Human Rights Violations The International and Historical Dimensions of the Alien Torts Claims Act Genocide Case of the Herero of Namibia Human Rights Review 9 3 2008 331 360 Sarkin Jeremy and Carly Fowler Reparations for Historical Human Rights Violations The International and Historical Dimensions of the Alien Torts Claims Act Genocide Case of the Herero of Namibia Human Rights Review 9 3 2008 331 360 Grunder 2004 S 241 a b Miller p 19 a b c Miller p 20 a b c Garfield The Meinertzhagen Mystery p 83 Miller p 23 German East Africa Usambara Railway and Central Railway Haupt p 82 Togoland coast line and Hinterlandbahn Haupt p 66 Kamerun northern and main line Haupt p 56 map of rail lines in German South West Africa a b c Miller p 22 Haupt p 74 Haupt p 129 Miller p 21 school system in German East Africa Garfield p 83 hundreds of thousands of African children were in school Schultz Naumann p 181 school system and Chinese student enrollment in Kiautschou Davidson p 100 New Zealand building on the German educational infrastructure Miller p 68 German East Africa Tanga shelling of hospital by HMS Fox Haupt p 30 photograph of Dar es Salaam hospital Schultz Naumann p 183 Qingdao European and Chinese hospital Schultz Naumann p 169 Apia hospital wing expansion to accommodate growing Chinese labor force Lewthwaite pp 149 151 in Samoa German authorities implemented policies to draw locals into the stream of economic life the colonial government enforced that native cultivable land could not be sold Miller p 20 in German East Africa new land laws sharply curtailed expropriation of tribal acreage and African cultivators were encouraged to grow cash crops with technical aid from agronomists guaranteed prices and government assistance in marketing the produce Churchill Llewella P Samoa uma New York F amp S Publishing Co 1932 p 231 a b Miller p 21 Hans Georg Steltzer Die Deutschen und ihr Kolonialreich Societats Verlag Frankfurt am Main 1984 S 281 f Wilfried Westphal Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien C Bertelsmann Munchen 1984 S 262 265 287 288 Detzner Hermann Oberleut Kamerun Boundary Die nigerische Grenze von Kamerun zwischen Yola und dem Cross fluss M Teuts Schutzgeb 26 13 317 338 Louis 1963 p 178 Gann L H amp Duignan Peter The Rulers of German East Africa 1884 1914 Palo Alto California Stanford University Press 1977 p 271 Reinhard Karl Boromaus Desoye Die k u k Luftfahrtruppe Die Entstehung der Aufbau und die Organisation der osterreichisch ungarischen Heeresluftwaffe 1912 1918 1999 page 76 online Archived 16 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Louis 1967 pp 17 35 Louis 1967 p 30 Louis 1967 p 31 Louis 1967 p 37 Louis 1967 pp 16 36 Louis 1967 pp 102 116 Louis 1967 p 9 German South West Africa was the only African colony designated as a Class C mandate meaning that the indigenous population was judged incapable of even limited self government and the colony to be administered under the laws of the mandatory as an integral portion of its territory however South Africa never annexed the country outright although Smuts did toy with the idea J A R Marriott Modern England 1885 1945 4th ed 1948 p 413 Australia in effective control formally together with United Kingdom and New Zealand Louis 1967 pp 117 130 New Zealand goes to war The Capture of German Samoa nzhistory net nz Archived from the original on 14 November 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Louis 1967 p 132 a b c Louis 1967 p 7 General J C Smuts is often identified as the inventor of the idea of mandates Louis 1967 p 7 Louis 1967 p 6 Louis 1967 p 157 Louis 1963 p 233 Louis 1967 p 159 Louis 1967 p 160 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 p 156 Authaler Caroline 2019 Das volkerrechtliche Ende des deutschen Kolonialreichs Globale Neuordnung und transnationale Debatten in den 1920er Jahren und ihre Nachwirkungen Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 69 40 42 5 f Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Joachim Nohre Das Selbstverstandnis der Weimarer Kolonialbewegung im Spiegel ihrer Zeitschriftenliteratur LIT Munster 1998 ISBN 3 8258 3764 5 p 12 pp 51 f Karsten Linne Deutschland jenseits des Aquators Die NS Kolonialplanungen fur Afrika Ch Links Berlin 2008 pp 23 f Authaler Caroline 2019 Das volkerrechtliche Ende des deutschen Kolonialreichs Globale Neuordnung und transnationale Debatten in den 1920er Jahren und ihre Nachwirkungen Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 69 40 42 9 Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Karsten Linne Deutschland jenseits des Aquators Die NS Kolonialplanungen fur Afrika Ch Links Berlin 2008 p 38 Ralph Erbar 2007 Schnee Albert Hermann Heinrich Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 23 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 280 281 full text online The standard work on this Colonial Guilt Myth was Heinrich Albert Schnee Die koloniale Schuldluge Sachers und Kuschel Berlin 1924 Alfred Zintgraff Die koloniale Schuldluge in Hans H Kempe Die Bilanz 10 Jahre Vertrag von Versailles Berlin 1929 pp 103 ff Archived 18 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine Norman Rich Hitler s war aims The establishment of the new order WW Norton 1974 pp 404 405 Gerhard L Weinberg The Foreign Policy of Hitler s Germany Diplomatic Revolution in Europe 1933 1936 1970 pp 276 281 Willeke Sandler Empire in the Heimat Colonialism and Public Culture in the Third Reich Oxford UP 2018 p 10 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 p 173 Das deutsche Schicksal Archived 28 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Der Spiegel 27 June 1956 Gestorben Adolf Friedrich Herzog zu Mecklenburg Schwerin Archived 8 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Der Spiegel 11 August 1969 Marianne Bechhaus Gerst Koloniale Spuren im stadtischen Raum Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 69 Jg 40 42 2019 pp 40 45 online Archived 17 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Stefan Reis Schweize Verhandlungen zwischen Deutschland und Namibia Die Kolonialzeit holt Berlin ein Archived 8 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Neue Zurcher Zeitung 18 July 2017 Asiye Ozturk Editorial Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 44 45 2012 online Archived 30 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine Anne Sophie Friedel Editorial Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 40 42 2019 online Archived 30 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine Martin Doll Curator 2017 Koloniale Verbindungen Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Heinrich Heine Universitat 2017 Koloniale Verbindungen Ausstellung Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Albert Guaffo Stefanie Michels eds 2019 Koloniale Verbindungen Das Rheinland in Deutschland und das Grasland Kameruns Bielefeld Transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3 8376 4529 3 Johannes Hafner 20 September 2019 Rezension zu Guaffo Michels H Soz Kult HU Berlin Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Straehler Schutzgebietsgesetz Archived 3 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine In Heinrich Schnee Ed Deutsches Kolonial Lexikon Vol 3 Leipzig 1920 pp 317 319 Dominik Nagl Grenzfalle Staatsangehorigkeit Rassismus und nationale Identitat unter deutscher Kolonialherrschaft 1884 1914 Frankfurt Main 2007 pp 41 46 Ulrike Schaper Koloniale Verhandlungen Gerichtsbarkeit Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884 1916 Campus Frankfurt am Main New York 2012 pp 44 f Ulrike Schaper Koloniale Verhandlungen Gerichtsbarkeit Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884 1916 Campus Frankfurt am Main New York 2012 49 f Fachhochschule Potsdam ed 9 October 2018 Das III Seebataillon in Tsingtau Archivfuhrer deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Retrieved 11 January 2022 Ulrike Schaper Koloniale Verhandlungen Gerichtsbarkeit Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884 1916 Campus Frankfurt am Main New York 2012 49 f Steinkroger Julian 2019 Strafrecht und Strafrechtspflege in den deutschen Kolonien von 1884 bis 1914 Ein Rechtsvergleich innerhalb der Besitzungen des Kaiserreichs in Ubersee Hamburg Verlag Dr Kovac ISBN 978 3 339 11274 3 a b c Henderson William Otto 1962 Studies in German colonial history 2 ed Routledge p 35 ISBN 0 7146 1674 5 Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2009 a b c d e f Henderson William Otto 1962 Studies in German colonial history 2 ed Routledge p 34 ISBN 0 7146 1674 5 Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2009 Conrad Sebastian 2012 German Colonialism A Short History Cambridge University Press p 158 Deutsches Kolonial Lexikon 1920 Band I S 312 Bevolkerungsstand 1913 online Archived 24 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 S 44 und 61 Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 S 44 f und 61 Dieter Gosewinkel Einburgern und ausschliessen Die Nationalisierung der Staatsangehorigkeit vom Deutschen Bund bis zur Bundesrepublik Deutschland Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 2003 p 303 Birthe Kundrus Moderne Imperialisten Das Kaiserreich im Spiegel seiner Kolonien Bohlau Koln 2003 ISBN 3 412 18702 X pp 219 ff Frank Oliver Sobich Schwarze Bestien rote Gefahr Rassismus und Antisozialismus im deutschen Kaiserreich Campus Frankfurt am Main 2006 p 125 f Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 pp 91 f Horst Grunder Gott will es Eine Kreuzzugsbewegung am Ende des 19 Jahrhunderts Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht 28 1977 pp 218 f Winfried Speitkamp Deutsche Kolonialgeschichte Reclam Stuttgart 2005 S 91 97 Spoehr Florence 1963 White Falcon The House of Godeffroy and its Commercial and Scientific Role in the Pacific Palo Alto California Pacific Books p 51 101 Daniel J Walther Sex Public Health and Colonial Control The Campaign Against Venereal Diseases in Germany s Overseas Possessions 1884 1914 Social history of medicine 26 2 2013 182 203 Mamdani Mahmood 2001 When Victims Become Killers Colonialism Nativism and the Genocide in Rwanda Princeton Princeton University Press p 12 Cooper Allan D 2008 The Geography of Genocide University Press of America p 153 a b c d e Hitler s Black Victims The Historical Experiences of European Blacks Africans and African Americans During the Nazi Era Crosscurrents in African American History by Clarence Lusane page 50 51 Routledge 2002 Germans return skulls to Namibia On Friday Germany will return the first 20 of an estimated 300 skulls of indigenous Namibians butchered a century ago during an anti colonial uprising in what was then called South West Africa TimesLIVE South Africa 27 September 2011 Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 2 June 2013 Erichsen Casper and David Olusoga 2010 The Kaiser s Holocaust Germany s Forgotten Genocide and the Colonial Roots of Nazism Faber and Faber p 225 Encyclopaedia Britannica Social Darwinism Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 28 May 2019 Retrieved 23 April 2019 Richard Weikart The Origins of Social Darwinism in Germany 1859 1895 Journal of the History of Ideas 54 3 1993 469 488 in JSTOR Archived 10 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine Richard Weikart Progress through racial extermination Social Darwinism eugenics and pacifism in Germany 1860 1918 German Studies Review 26 2 2003 273 294 online Archived 2 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Michael Schubert The German nation and the black Other social Darwinism and the cultural mission in German colonial discourse Patterns of Prejudice 2011 45 5 pp 399 416 Felicity Rash The Discourse Strategies of Imperialist Writing The German Colonial Idea and Africa 1848 1945 Routledge 2016 Weikart Richard 7 May 2003 Progress through Racial Extermination Social Darwinism Eugenics and Pacifism in Germany 1860 1918 German Studies Review 26 2 273 294 doi 10 2307 1433326 JSTOR 1433326 Jonathan Derrick The Germanophone Elite of Douala under the French Mandate Journal of African History 1980 255 267 online Archived 2 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Germany subsequently tried to turn Europe into its colonial possession by practicing a migrations form of colonialism that was reworked into the ideology of Lebensraum Aime Cesaire pointed out that fascism was a form of colonialism brought home to Europe Postcolonialism An Historical Introduction Robert Young Published 2001 Blackwell Publishing page 2 Helmut Bley Continuities and German Colonialism Colonial Experience and Metropolitan Developments Historisches Seminar Universitat Hannover 2004 Volker Langbehn and Mohammad SalamaRace eds the Holocaust and Postwar Germany Columbia U P 2011 Michael Pesek Das Ende eines Kolonialreiches Campus Frankfurt a M New York 2010 ISBN 978 3 593 39184 7 pp 86 90 Sources and references EditAchleitner Arthur Johannes Biernatzki 1902 Deutschland und seine Kolonieen Wanderungen durch das Reich und seine uberseeischen Besitzungen unter Mitwirkung von Arthur Achleitner Johannes Biernatzki etc Berlin Germany H Hilger Esherick Joseph W 18 August 1988 The Origins of the Boxer Uprising University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 90896 3 Westermann Grosser Atlas zur Weltgeschichte in German WorldStatesmen orgBibliography EditAusten Ralph A Derrick Jonathan 1999 Middlemen of the Cameroons Rivers The Duala and their Hinterland c 1600 c 1960 Cambridge University Press Berghahn Volker Rolf German Colonialism and Imperialism from Bismarck to Hitler German Studies Review 40 1 2017 pp 147 162 Online Boahen A Adu ed 1985 Africa Under Colonial Domination 1880 1935 Berkeley U of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06702 8 1990 Abridged edition Boianovsky Mauro Friedrich List and the economic fate of tropical countries History of Political Economy 45 4 2013 647 691 online Carroll E Malcolm Germany and the great powers 1866 1914 A study in public opinion and foreign policy 1938 looks at newspapers Chamberlain Muriel E The scramble for Africa Routledge 2014 looks at all the powers Chickering Roger We men who feel most German a cultural study of the Pan German League 1886 1914 Routledge 2019 Churchill William Germany s Lost Pacific Empire Geographical Review 10 2 1920 84 90 online Crankshaw Edward 1981 Bismarck New York The Viking Press ISBN 0 14 006344 7 Davidson J W 1967 Samoa mo Samoa the Emergence of the Independent State of Western Samoa Melbourne Oxford University Press Eley Geoff and Bradley Naranch eds German Colonialism in a Global Age Duke UP 2014 Esser Max Cameroon s Tycoon Max Esser s expedition and its consequences Berghahn Books 2001 Gann L and Peter Duignan The Rulers of German Africa 1884 1914 1977 focuses on political and economic history Garfield Brian 2007 The Meinertzhagen Mystery Washington DC Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 59797 041 9 Giordani Paolo 1916 The German colonial empire its beginning and ending London G Bell Henderson W O The German Colonial Empire 1884 1918 History 20 78 1935 pp 151 158 Online historiography Henderson W O Germany s Trade with Her Colonies 1884 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National Identity 2010 focuses on cultural impact in Africa and Germany Poddar Prem and Lars Jensen eds A historical companion to postcolonial literatures Continental Europe and Its Empires Edinburgh UP 2008 Germany and its colonies pp 198 261 excerpt also entire text online Poiger Uta G Imperialism and empire in twentieth century Germany History amp Memory 17 1 2 2005 117 143 online Reimann Dawe Tracey The British Other on African soil the rise of nationalism in colonial German travel writing on Africa Patterns of Prejudice 2011 45 5 pp 417 433 the perceived hostile force was Britain not the natives Sanderson George Neville The European partition of Africa Coincidence or conjuncture Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 3 1 1974 1 54 Sandler Willeke Empire in the Heimat Colonialism and Public Culture in the Third Reich Oxford UP 2018 excerpt Sarkin Jeremy and Carly Fowler Reparations for Historical Human Rights Violations The International and Historical Dimensions of the Alien Torts Claims Act Genocide Case of the Herero of Namibia Human Rights Review 9 3 2008 331 360 online dead link Smith Woodruff The Colonial Novel as Political Propaganda Hans Grimm s Volk Ohne Raum German Studies Review 6 2 1983 215 235 online Smith W D 1974 The Ideology of German Colonialism 1840 1906 Journal of Modern History 46 1974 641 663 doi 10 1086 241266 S2CID 153844608 Steinmetz George 2007 The Devil s Handwriting Precoloniality and the German Colonial State in Qingdao Samoa and Southwest Africa Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226772431 Stoecker Helmut ed 1987 German Imperialism in Africa From the Beginnings Until the Second World War Translated by Bernd Zollner Atlantic Highlands NJ Humanities Press International ISBN 978 0 391 03383 2 Strandmann Hartmut Pogge von Domestic Origins of Germany s Colonial Expansion under Bismarck Past amp Present 1969 42 140 159 online von Strandmann H Pogge The German Role in Africa and German Imperialism A Review Article African Affairs 69 277 1970 381 389 online Taylor A J P 1967 Bismarck The Man and the Statesman New York Random House Inc Townsend Mary Evelyn The rise and fall of Germany s colonial empire 1884 1918 1930 online Townsend Mary Evelyn Origins of modern German colonialism 1871 1885 1921 online Uzoigwe Godfrey N Reflections on the Berlin West Africa Conference 1884 1885 Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 12 3 4 1984 9 22 online Walther Daniel J Sex Race and Empire White Male Sexuality and the Other in Germany s Colonies 1894 1914 German Studies Review 2010 45 71 online Wehler Hans Ulrich Bismarck s Imperialism 1862 1890 Past amp Present 1970 48 119 55 online Wesseling H L 1996 Divide and Rule The Partition of Africa 1880 1914 Translated by Arnold J Pomerans Westport CT Preager ISBN 978 0 275 95137 5 ISBN 978 0 275 95138 2 Wildenthal Lora German women for empire 1884 1945 Duke University Press 2001 In German Edit Detzner Hermann Oberleut Kamerun Boundary Die nigerische Grenze von Kamerun zwischen Yola und dem Cross fluss M Teuts Schutzgeb 26 13 317 338 Haupt Werner 1984 Deutschlands Schutzgebiete in Ubersee 1884 1918 Germany s Overseas Protectorates 1884 1918 Friedberg Podzun Pallas Verlag ISBN 3 7909 0204 7 Nagl Dominik 2007 Grenzfalle Staatsangehorigkeit Rassismus und nationale Identitat unter deutscher Kolonialherrschaft Frankfurt Main Peter Lang Verlag ISBN 978 3 631 56458 5 Schultz Naumann Joachim 1985 Unter Kaisers Flagge Deutschlands Schutzgebiete im Pazifik und in China einst und heute Under the Kaiser s flag Germany s Protectorates in the Pacific and in China then and today Munich Universitas Verlag Schaper Ulrike 2012 Koloniale Verhandlungen Gerichtsbarkeit Verwaltung und Herrschaft in Kamerun 1884 1916 Frankfurt am Main Campus Verlag ISBN 978 3 593 39639 2 Karl Waldeck Gut und Blut fur unsern Kaiser Windhoek 2010 ISBN 978 99945 71 55 0 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 1 2 Auflage Windhoek 2012 ISBN 978 99916 872 1 6 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 2 Naulila Windhoek 2012 ISBN 978 99916 872 3 0 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 3 Kampfe im Suden Windhoek 2014 ISBN 978 99916 872 8 5 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 4 Der Suden ist verloren Windhoek 2015 ISBN 978 99916 909 2 6 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 5 Aufgabe der Kuste Windhoek 2016 ISBN 978 99916 909 4 0 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 6 Aufgabe der Zentralregionen Windhoek 2017 ISBN 978 99916 909 5 7 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 7 Der Ring schliesst sich Windhoek 2018 ISBN 978 99916 909 7 1 Historicus Africanus Der 1 Weltkrieg in Deutsch Sudwestafrika 1914 15 Band 8 Das Ende bei Khorab Windhoek 2018 ISBN 978 99916 909 9 5 In French Edit Gemeaux de Christine dir presentation et conclusion Empires et colonies L Allemagne du Saint Empire au deuil post colonial Clermont Ferrand PUBP coll Politiques et Identites 2010 ISBN 978 2 84516 436 9 External links EditDeutsche Schutzgebiete de German Protectorates in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German colonial empire amp oldid 1175894529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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