Carl Christian Koldewey | |
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Carl Christian Koldewey |
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Born | October 26, 1837 Bücken, Germany |
Died | May 17, 1908 Hamburg |
(aged 70)
Occupation | Explorer |
Parents | Johann Christian Koldewey, Wilhelmine Meyer |
Carl Christian Koldewey (born October 26, 1837 in Bücken near Hoya, Germany; died May 17, 1908 in Hamburg) was a German Arctic explorer. He led both German North Polar Expeditions.
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Koldewey was the son of merchant Johann Christian Koldewey and his wife Wilhelmine Meyer. Koldewey enrolled as a sailor in 1853 immediately after grammar school at Clausthal. At 22 he attended the naval school in Bremen, where he was among Arthur Breusing's best pupils. Later he went to sea again but returned to naval school in 1861. After becoming a captain, Koldewey studied mathematics, physics, and astronomy at the universities of Hanover and Göttingen between 1866 and 1867.
Through his teacher Breusing and encouraged by August Petermann Koldewey was given the leadership of the first Arctic expedition as captain of ship Grönland. He had the choice of either advancing northwards as far as possible along Greenland's east coast or to reach so-called Gillis-Land by travelling around Spitsbergen. But adverse conditions and strong ice floes prevented him from reaching both destinations. Finally he reached his northmost latitude of 81°5' near Spitsbergen and returned.
From 1869 to 1870 he was captain of the Germania and the leader of another expedition to Greenland and to the Arctic Sea which intended to penetrate into the Arctic central region. It was equipped with the propeller steamboat Germania and the sailing ship Hansa under captain Paul Friedrich Hegemann. Six scientists joined the expedition: astronomers and physicists Karl Nikolai Jensen Börgen and Ralph Copeland, zoologist, botanist and physician Adolf Pansch, and surveyor Julius von Payer. On the Hansa travelled physician and zoologist R. Buchholz and geologist Gustav Carl Laube.
The expedition left Bremerhaven on June 15, 1869. Already on July 20 both ships were separated. The Hansa was crushed by the ice on October 19, 1869 and the crew saved itself on an ice floe. Meanwhile the Germania reached Sabine Island on August 5, 1869. From there the task of mapping out of the coast between 73° and 77° northern latitude was undertaken by taking measurements from the ship or using sleighs and whalers. This work was a continuation of Edward Sabine's 1823 expedition. Trying to reach the North pole, the Germania reached its northernmost latitude 75°30'N on August 14 northeast of Shannon Island, where they had to return on account of lack of leads in the ice. Payer carried out the mapping of Shannon island while the astronomers took latitude measurements on it. A wintering camp was established at Sabine island from August 27, 1869 to July 22, 1870. Advancing inland using sleighs, the islands and coast of Greenland were mapped. Further investigations were carried out that provide an insight into the magnitude of Greenland's mountains and glaciers. However, the actual highlight and most considerable geographical achievement of the expedition was the discovery and investigation of Kaiser-Franz-Joseph-Fjord.
After finishing the expeditions Koldewey worked as a writer and took part in scientific publications. Since 1871 he worked at the German naval observatory in Hamburg, whose Nautical Instruments department he took over in 1875. On July 31, 1905 he retired as an admiralty's director. One of his nephews, Robert Koldewey (1855-1925), became a famous archaeologist and architecture historian.
Places named after Carl Koldewey:
All links are in German.