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  • Hermann Detzner
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  • Hermann Philipp Detzner (16 October 1882 – 1 December 1970) was an officer in the German colonial security force (Schutztruppe) in Kamerun and German New Guinea, as well as a surveyor, an engineer, an adventurer, and a writer.
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serviceyears
  • c. 1901–1919
Birth Date
  • 1882-10-16
Branch
death place
  • Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, West Germany
Artikel
  • Keysser, Christian
Name
  • Hermann Philipp Detzner
Caption
  • Hermann Detzner, portrayed on the jacket of the 1921 edition of his book, Four Years Among the Cannibals.
Father
  • Philipp Detzner 1846–1907
Autor
  • Herwig Wagner
Mother
  • Katherine Wilhelmine neé Faber
Birth Place
  • Speyer, Bavarian Palatinate, German Empire
Spalten
  • 1447
Awards
  • Honorary degree, University of Bonn
  • Iron Cross (1st Class), 1919
death date
  • 1970-12-01
Rank
  • Major
Battles
  • World War I: Australian Occupation of German New Guinea
laterwork
  • Engineer, topographer, explorer, government official, writer
Band
  • 3
Signature
  • Hermann Detzner signature.png
abstract
  • Hermann Philipp Detzner (16 October 1882 – 1 December 1970) was an officer in the German colonial security force (Schutztruppe) in Kamerun and German New Guinea, as well as a surveyor, an engineer, an adventurer, and a writer. In early 1914, the German government sent Detzner to explore and chart the interior of Kaiser-Wilhelmsland, the imperial protectorate on the island of New Guinea. When World War I broke out in Europe, he was well into the interior and without radio contact. He refused to surrender to Australian troops when they occupied German New Guinea, concealing himself in the jungle with a band of approximately 20 soldiers. For four years, Detzner and his troops provocatively marched through the bush, singing "Watch on the Rhine" and flying the German Imperial flag. He led at least one expedition from the Huon Peninsula to the north coast, and a second by a mountain route, to attempt an escape to the neutral Dutch colony to the west. He explored areas of the Guinean interior formerly unseen by Europeans and surrendered in full dress uniform, flying the Imperial flag, to Australian forces in January 1919. Detzner received a hero's welcome when he returned to Germany. He wrote a book about his adventures—Four Years Among the Cannibals in the Interior of German New Guinea under the Imperial Flag, from 1914 until the Armistice—that achieved notoriety in Great Britain and Germany, entered three printings, and was translated into French, English, Finnish and Swedish. He received a position in the Imperial Colonial Archives, and appeared frequently on the lecture circuit throughout the 1920s. In the late 1920s, scientific portions of his book were discredited. In 1932, he admitted that he had mixed fact and fiction and, after that time, eschewed public life.