Curt von François
Curt von François | |
---|---|
François in Schutztruppe uniform, 1896 | |
Governor of German South-West Africa | |
In office March 1891 – 15 March 1894 | |
Preceded by | Louis Nels (acting) |
Succeeded by | Theodor Leutwein |
Personal details | |
Born | Luxembourg, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg | 2 October 1852
Died | 28 December 1931 79) Königs Wusterhausen, Germany | (aged
Curt Karl Bruno von François (2 October 1852 – 28 December 1931) was a Schutztruppe officer and commissioner in the early days of German colonialism in German South-West Africa (today's Namibia). He is also remembered as the founder of the present-day City of Windhoek.
Life
François was born in Luxembourg of French Huguenot ancestry, the son of Prussian general Bruno von François. Curt's younger brother Hermann von François (1856–1933) served as a general in World War I and was one of the key contributors to the German victory at the 1914 Battle of Tannenberg. The writer Louise von François was his aunt.
Like his ancestors, young Curt von François joined the Prussian Cadet Corps. He served as a soldier in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71, whereby his father was killed in action during the Battle of Spicheren on 6 August 1870, and was awarded the Iron Cross. In 1883 he worked as a geographer on an exploratory expedition along the Kasai River in the Congo region under the leadership of Hermann Wissmann and two years later joined another expedition into the Congo led by George Grenfell. Back in Germany, he became a member of the German General Staff, and was elevated to the rank of Hauptmann (Captain). In 1887 he was stationed as an research officer in German West Africa. On behalf of the Foreign Office, he explored Togoland and the trade route to Salaga up to the Mossi territory in the north.
South-West Africa
In 1883, the German merchant Adolf Lüderitz had purchased the coastal area of Angra Pequena, following negotiations with a local African chief. He called this coastal region of southwestern Africa- "Lüderitz". Fearing that the British were soon to declare the area a protectorate, Lüderitz advised the German chancellor Otto von Bismarck to claim it, which he did at the Berlin Conference of 1884. On October 7, the colony of German South-West Africa was established under Reichskommissar governor Gustav Nachtigal.
However, the German authorities met with fierce resistance by the local Herero people. When in 1888 their officials were forcibly expelled from Okahandja, the German Colonial Society engaged Hauptmann Curt von François to provide security to the territory. In June 1889 he arrived with 21 troopers, 8 soldiers of the Imperial Army and 13 volunteers in the British-held enclave of Walvis Bay. Soon afterwards François stationed himself at Otjimbingwe (against the advice of acting commissioner Heinrich Göring) in order to deal with opponents to German authority in the interior of the territory. In May 1890 he renewed a former peace agreement with the Herero chief Maharero and eventually occupied the completely destroyed settlement of Windhoek (founded by Jonker Afrikaner decades earlier). Upon Maharero's death in October, his son Samuel Maharero had to reaffirm the treaty. At Windhoek, François set up the new headquarters of the German occupation (which he called Alte Feste, Old Fortress). This location was chosen because the Germans felt it would serve as a buffer zone between the Nama and Herero tribes.
After Göring was recalled from office, François served as Reichskommissar of German South-West Africa from March 1891 until November 1893. Within this time period (on 12 September 1892) he established the coastal town of Swakopmund as the main harbour of German South-West Africa[1] and mapped large parts of the colony. In November 1893 he was promoted to Major and given the title of Landeshauptmann.
However, François at the same time had to cope with the rising resistance by the Nama people. On 12 April 1893 he led an attack of 225 German soldiers on Nama leader Hendrik Witbooi's headquarters at Hoornkrans west of Rehoboth. The shelling of the Oorlam kraal and its final storming led to tremedous cicilian casualties. Rendered as the "Massacre of Hoornkrans" by the international press, it severely damaged François' reputation. Moreover, Witbooi escaped and fled into the Naukluft Mountains, where he waged several months of guerilla warfare against the German forces.
Later years
In 1894 François was replaced by Theodor Leutwein as Landeshauptmann of South-West Africa. He embarked in Cape Town to Germany and during the following year he retired from military life. In retirement in Zernsdorf, Brandenburg he wrote extensively about his experiences in Africa. He died in a Königs Wusterhausen hospital on 28 December 1931. François was buried in the Invalids' Cemetery in Berlin, his grave is not preserved.
The original Schutztruppe headquarters built at the behest of François in 1890 at Windhoek was expanded in 1912, and has been a museum since 1962.
Written works
- Die Erforschung des Tschuapa und Lulongo : Reisen in Centralafrika, Brockhaus, Leipzig 1888. - Exploration of Tschuapa and Lulongo: Travels in Central Africa.
- Deutsch-Südwest-Afrika, Verlag D. Reimer, Berlin 1899. - German South West Africa.
- Kriegführung in Süd-Afrika, Dietrich Reimer, Berlin 1900. - Warfare in South Africa.
- Lehren aus dem Südafrikanischen Kriege für das deutsche Heer. with eight sketches, Verlag E. S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin 1901. - Lessons from the South African War for the German army.
- Der Hottentotten-Aufstand. Studie über die Vorgänge im Namalande v. Jan. 1904 bis 2. Jan. 1905 u. d. Aussichten d. Niederwerfung d. Aufstandes., Berlin 1905. - The Hottentot uprising, etc.
- Written works copied from an equivalent article at the German Wikipedia.
References and external links
- ↑ Historical Dictionary of Namibia by Victor L. Tonchi, William A. Lindeke, John J. Grotpeter
- Biographies of Namibian personalities by Klaus Dierks
- Kurt von François (1899). Deutsch-Südwest-Afrika. D. Reimer.
|
|