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・ Abraham the Monk
・ Abraham the Poor
・ Abraham the Writer
・ Abraham Thomas
・ Abraham Tichner House
・ Abraham Tobias Boas
・ Abraham Tokazier
・ Abraham Tolentino
・ Abraham Torres
・ Abraham Trebitsch
・ Abraham Trembley
・ Abraham Tucker
・ Abraham Tuizentfloot
・ Abraham Turgeon
・ Abraham Udovitch
Abraham Ulrikab
・ Abraham Usque
・ Abraham V. Harpending
・ Abraham V. Schenck
・ Abraham Valdelomar
・ Abraham van Beijeren
・ Abraham van Blijenberch
・ Abraham Van Buren
・ Abraham van Calraet
・ Abraham van den Blocke
・ Abraham van den Hecken
・ Abraham van den Kerckhoven
・ Abraham van der Doort
・ Abraham van der Haagen
・ Abraham van der Hart


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Abraham Ulrikab : ウィキペディア英語版
Abraham Ulrikab

Abraham Ulrikab (January 29, 1845〔 - January 13, 1881) was an Inuk from Hebron, Labrador, in the present day province of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, who – along with his family and four other Inuit – agreed to become the latest attraction in the ethnographical shows organized by Carl Hagenbeck, owner of the Tierpark Hagenbeck, a zoo in Hamburg, Germany.
==The Inuit Are Exhibited in Europe (September 1880-January 1881)==
The eight Inuit were from two families. Their approximate ages upon arrival in Europe were as follows:
*The Christian family
*
*Abraham, 35,
*
*Ulrike, 24, his wife
*
*Sara, 3 1/2, daughter
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*Maria, infant daughter, 10 months
*
*Tobias, 20, a young unmarried man.
*The non-Christian family
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*Terrianiak, about 45, father
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*Paingo, as old as 50, wife
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*Noggasak, their teenage daughter about 15.
On August 26, 1880, all eight Inuit boarded the schooner ''Eisbär'' (which means "polar bear" in German) and headed to Europe. They arrived in Hamburg on September 24, 1880. Their show at the Tierpark Hagenbeck opened on October 2. On October 15, the group was moved to Berlin where they were exhibited at the Berlin zoo until November 14. They then traveled to Prague followed by Frankfurt and Darmstadt. Here, Noggasak died suddenly on December 14. The group moved on to Crefeld where Paingo died on December 27. It wasn't until little Sara showed symptoms that the doctors were finally able to diagnose the cause of death of the two women: smallpox. It is with a broken heart that Abraham and Ulrike had to entrust Sara to the hospital in Crefeld when the group had to depart for Paris. Sara died on December 31 as her parents arrived in Paris. The five survivors were vaccinated against smallpox on January 1, 1881. Unfortunately, it was too late. The group was exhibited at the Jardin d'Acclimation in the Bois de Boulogne for about a week. Then, on January 9, 1881, they were admitted to the St. Louis Hospital where they all died within the next week. Maria died on January 10. Terrianniak on January 11. Tobias and Abraham died on January 13, and Ulrike, the last to live, died January 16, 1881.
Norwegian Johan Adrian Jacobsen, who had recruited them, had omitted to have them vaccinated against smallpox, even though it was a mandatory requirement as per German law. In his own diary, he admits that he had totally forgotten about it.
Abraham was literate, an accomplished violin player and a devout Christian. He became the natural leader of the eight and had agreed to go to Europe to earn the money that would allow him to repay a debt of £10 to the Moravian mission in Hebron. He was also curious to visit Europe and was looking forward to see some of the moravian missionaries he had met when they were posted in Labrador.
Abraham kept a diary written in his native Inuktitut; it was among his possessions that were sent back to the Moravian mission in Hebron after his death. The diary tells us that within weeks of arriving in Europe, the families realized they had made a mistake in coming and they longed to return to Labrador.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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