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Oscar Baumann (June 25, 1864 in Vienna – October 12, 1899 in Vienna) was an Austrian explorer, cartographer and ethnographer. He attended classes on natural history and geography at the University of Vienna, and in 1885 was part of an Austrian exploratory expedition of the Congo Basin under the direction of Oskar Lenz. However, because of serious illness, Baumann would be forced to leave the expedition prior to its conclusion. In 1886 he conducted ethnographical research on the island of Fernando Po. When he returned to Europe, he received his PhD from the University of Leipzig (1888).〔(de.Wikisource ) at Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie〕 Baumann is best known for his exploration of the interior of German East Africa (present-day Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi), and for producing maps of the region. In 1888, with geographer Hans Meyer, he explored the Usambara region, with designs of continuing on to Mount Kilimanjaro. The two explorers progress was stopped, however, due to ramifications associated with the so-called "Abushiri Revolt" (1888–89). Within a matter of days Baumann and Meyer were captured and held as prisoners. According to the British Rear-Admiral Edmund Fremantle: 'They had been robbed, stripped, and subjected to every indignity, but except that they have lost all, including their instruments and observations, they do not seem much the worse'.〔Fremantle to Admiralty, 23 October 1888, FO 403/107, TNA 〕Only after a large ransom was paid to rebel leader Abushiri ibn Salim al-Harthi were the two men released.〔() Across East African Glaciers By Hans Meyer, E.H.S. Calder〕 Baumann's most celebrated mission was the 200-member "Maasai Expedition" of 1891-1893. On the expedition, he performed map-making duties, and was the first European to enter Rwanda (1892).〔 He was also the first European to visit Lake Eyasi,〔( The Nile quest: a record of the exploration of the Nile and its basin ) by Sir Harry Hamilton Johnston〕 Lake Manyara,〔(Google Books ) Scottish Geographical Magazine, Volume 8〕 and Ngorongoro Crater.〔(Tanzania ) by Philip Briggs〕 On the expedition, he explored the headwaters of the Kagera River, which he reasoned, was the true source of the Nile.〔(Google Books ) The Liberal and the New Dispensation, Volume 12〕〔(Google Books ) Scientific American〕 As a result of the journey, he produced a book titled "''Durch Massailand zur Nilquelle''" (By Massailand to the Source of Nile, 1894) . In 1896, Baumann was appointed consul to Zanzibar by the Austro-Hungarian government. However, he died a few years later of an infectious disease at the age of 35.〔 In 1902 the thoroughfare ''Baumannstraße'', in the district of Landstraße (Vienna), was named in his honor.〔(Wien Geschichte ) Baumannstraße〕 == Written works by Oscar Baumann == * ''Beiträge zur Ethnologie des Congo'', 1887. * ''Versuch einer Monographie von Fernando Póo'', 1888 (dissertation).〔(OCLC WorldCat ) List of published works〕 * ''Fernando Po and the Bube''. Vienna (1888). * ''In Deutsch-Ostafrika während des Aufstandes'' (In German East Africa during the Rebellion), Vienna (1890). * ''Usambara'' (Usambara), Berlin (1891). * ''Karte des nordöstlichen Deutsch-Ostafrika'' (Map of northeastern German East Africa), Berlin (1893). * ''Durch Massailand zur Nilquelle'' (By Massailand to the Source of the Nile), Berlin (1894). * ''Die kartographischen Ergebnisse der Massai-Expedition'' (The cartographic results of the Massai expedition), In: Petermann's Geographische Mitteilungen, Ergebnisheft 111, Gotha (1894). * ''The Sansibar archipelago''. 3 booklets. Leipzig (1896–99). * ''Afrikanische Skizzen'' (African sketches), Berlin (1900).〔(HathiTrust Digital Library ) published works〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Oscar Baumann」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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