Margarethe Von Eckenbrecher
Africa
What It Gave Me, What It Took from Me : Remembrances from My Life as a German Settler in South West Africa
Margarethe Von Eckenbrecher
Africa
What It Gave Me, What It Took from Me : Remembrances from My Life as a German Settler in South West Africa
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Africa: What It Gave Me, What It Took from Me is a memoir of an extraordinary woman who, as a newlywed, travelled with her husband to German South West Africa, a colony situated just above South African on the Atlantic coast.
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Africa: What It Gave Me, What It Took from Me is a memoir of an extraordinary woman who, as a newlywed, travelled with her husband to German South West Africa, a colony situated just above South African on the Atlantic coast.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Lehigh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 795g
- ISBN-13: 9781611461503
- ISBN-10: 1611461502
- Artikelnr.: 42053392
- Verlag: Lehigh University Press
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 795g
- ISBN-13: 9781611461503
- ISBN-10: 1611461502
- Artikelnr.: 42053392
David P. Crandall is associate professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University. Hans-Wilhelm Kelling is professor of German studies at Brigham Young University. Paul Kerry is associate professor History at Brigham Young University and associate visiting research fellow at the Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford.
Acknowledgments Biographical Entries A Reader's Introduction Book I Preface
Leaving Home 1. The First Ten Days 2. Las Palmas 3. Monrovia 4. Nifu 5.
Mossamdes 6. Port Alexander 7. Swakopmund 8. The Journey to Karibib 9.
Karibib 10. By Oxcart from Karibib to Okombahe Okombahe 1. Something about
the Natives of the Colony 2. The Activities of the Missionaries in the
Protectorate 3. Our First Abode 4. Worries of a Housewife 5. Building Our
Home 6. Future Plans and Disappointments 7. Cattle Raising 8. Gui-Gams 9.
Cultivating a Garden 10. Experiences and Observations 11. Spitzkoppies
Insurrection 1. Foreboding Weather 2. The Insurrection Begins 3. A
Dangerous Ride 4. In the Fortress 5. Under the Protection of the Franke
Company 6. In the Barracks at Omaruru 7. My Return to Germany Book II A
Note to my Readers The New South West 1. My Return to South West Africa 2.
Our Idealic Life in Klein-Windhuk How I Experienced the First World War 1.
The Impending Storm 2. The Future is Foreshadowed in Everyday Events 3. The
People of the Colony Prepare Themselves 4. Mobilization 5. South Africa
Begins Hostilities 6. Treachery at Naulila 7. Our Commander Dies 8. A
Punitive Expedition to Naulila 9. The Baster War 10. The Germans must be
Cleared Out 11. General Botha Occupies Windhuk 12. An Honorable Surrender
13. Living under Martial Law South West Becomes a League of Nations Mandate
1. Dissolution? 2. Expulsions 3. The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 4. Changes
5. New Unrest 6. The House on the Mountain 7. Life under Mandate Rule 8.
Our German Schools 9. My Sons 10. Hunting in the African Bush and a Return
to our Home in Okombahe 11. From the Brandberg to Franzfontein 12.
Korichaams 13. Etoscha and the Waterberg 14. 1934: The Year of Torrential
Rains 15. Of Diamonds, Gold, and other Treasures A Concluding and Final
Word Postscript
Leaving Home 1. The First Ten Days 2. Las Palmas 3. Monrovia 4. Nifu 5.
Mossamdes 6. Port Alexander 7. Swakopmund 8. The Journey to Karibib 9.
Karibib 10. By Oxcart from Karibib to Okombahe Okombahe 1. Something about
the Natives of the Colony 2. The Activities of the Missionaries in the
Protectorate 3. Our First Abode 4. Worries of a Housewife 5. Building Our
Home 6. Future Plans and Disappointments 7. Cattle Raising 8. Gui-Gams 9.
Cultivating a Garden 10. Experiences and Observations 11. Spitzkoppies
Insurrection 1. Foreboding Weather 2. The Insurrection Begins 3. A
Dangerous Ride 4. In the Fortress 5. Under the Protection of the Franke
Company 6. In the Barracks at Omaruru 7. My Return to Germany Book II A
Note to my Readers The New South West 1. My Return to South West Africa 2.
Our Idealic Life in Klein-Windhuk How I Experienced the First World War 1.
The Impending Storm 2. The Future is Foreshadowed in Everyday Events 3. The
People of the Colony Prepare Themselves 4. Mobilization 5. South Africa
Begins Hostilities 6. Treachery at Naulila 7. Our Commander Dies 8. A
Punitive Expedition to Naulila 9. The Baster War 10. The Germans must be
Cleared Out 11. General Botha Occupies Windhuk 12. An Honorable Surrender
13. Living under Martial Law South West Becomes a League of Nations Mandate
1. Dissolution? 2. Expulsions 3. The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 4. Changes
5. New Unrest 6. The House on the Mountain 7. Life under Mandate Rule 8.
Our German Schools 9. My Sons 10. Hunting in the African Bush and a Return
to our Home in Okombahe 11. From the Brandberg to Franzfontein 12.
Korichaams 13. Etoscha and the Waterberg 14. 1934: The Year of Torrential
Rains 15. Of Diamonds, Gold, and other Treasures A Concluding and Final
Word Postscript
Acknowledgments Biographical Entries A Reader's Introduction Book I Preface
Leaving Home 1. The First Ten Days 2. Las Palmas 3. Monrovia 4. Nifu 5.
Mossamdes 6. Port Alexander 7. Swakopmund 8. The Journey to Karibib 9.
Karibib 10. By Oxcart from Karibib to Okombahe Okombahe 1. Something about
the Natives of the Colony 2. The Activities of the Missionaries in the
Protectorate 3. Our First Abode 4. Worries of a Housewife 5. Building Our
Home 6. Future Plans and Disappointments 7. Cattle Raising 8. Gui-Gams 9.
Cultivating a Garden 10. Experiences and Observations 11. Spitzkoppies
Insurrection 1. Foreboding Weather 2. The Insurrection Begins 3. A
Dangerous Ride 4. In the Fortress 5. Under the Protection of the Franke
Company 6. In the Barracks at Omaruru 7. My Return to Germany Book II A
Note to my Readers The New South West 1. My Return to South West Africa 2.
Our Idealic Life in Klein-Windhuk How I Experienced the First World War 1.
The Impending Storm 2. The Future is Foreshadowed in Everyday Events 3. The
People of the Colony Prepare Themselves 4. Mobilization 5. South Africa
Begins Hostilities 6. Treachery at Naulila 7. Our Commander Dies 8. A
Punitive Expedition to Naulila 9. The Baster War 10. The Germans must be
Cleared Out 11. General Botha Occupies Windhuk 12. An Honorable Surrender
13. Living under Martial Law South West Becomes a League of Nations Mandate
1. Dissolution? 2. Expulsions 3. The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 4. Changes
5. New Unrest 6. The House on the Mountain 7. Life under Mandate Rule 8.
Our German Schools 9. My Sons 10. Hunting in the African Bush and a Return
to our Home in Okombahe 11. From the Brandberg to Franzfontein 12.
Korichaams 13. Etoscha and the Waterberg 14. 1934: The Year of Torrential
Rains 15. Of Diamonds, Gold, and other Treasures A Concluding and Final
Word Postscript
Leaving Home 1. The First Ten Days 2. Las Palmas 3. Monrovia 4. Nifu 5.
Mossamdes 6. Port Alexander 7. Swakopmund 8. The Journey to Karibib 9.
Karibib 10. By Oxcart from Karibib to Okombahe Okombahe 1. Something about
the Natives of the Colony 2. The Activities of the Missionaries in the
Protectorate 3. Our First Abode 4. Worries of a Housewife 5. Building Our
Home 6. Future Plans and Disappointments 7. Cattle Raising 8. Gui-Gams 9.
Cultivating a Garden 10. Experiences and Observations 11. Spitzkoppies
Insurrection 1. Foreboding Weather 2. The Insurrection Begins 3. A
Dangerous Ride 4. In the Fortress 5. Under the Protection of the Franke
Company 6. In the Barracks at Omaruru 7. My Return to Germany Book II A
Note to my Readers The New South West 1. My Return to South West Africa 2.
Our Idealic Life in Klein-Windhuk How I Experienced the First World War 1.
The Impending Storm 2. The Future is Foreshadowed in Everyday Events 3. The
People of the Colony Prepare Themselves 4. Mobilization 5. South Africa
Begins Hostilities 6. Treachery at Naulila 7. Our Commander Dies 8. A
Punitive Expedition to Naulila 9. The Baster War 10. The Germans must be
Cleared Out 11. General Botha Occupies Windhuk 12. An Honorable Surrender
13. Living under Martial Law South West Becomes a League of Nations Mandate
1. Dissolution? 2. Expulsions 3. The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 4. Changes
5. New Unrest 6. The House on the Mountain 7. Life under Mandate Rule 8.
Our German Schools 9. My Sons 10. Hunting in the African Bush and a Return
to our Home in Okombahe 11. From the Brandberg to Franzfontein 12.
Korichaams 13. Etoscha and the Waterberg 14. 1934: The Year of Torrential
Rains 15. Of Diamonds, Gold, and other Treasures A Concluding and Final
Word Postscript