Maximilian Franz Thiel

Maximilian Franz Thiel, often just called Max Thiel, (12 January 1865 16 May 1939) was a German agent who worked for Hernsheim & Co in German New Guinea. He was manager of the Pacific operations of the German enterprise.[1] His mother Rosetta Albertina was sister to Eduard and Franz Hernsheim,[2] the founders of Hernsheim & Co. In at least 1884 he was living on Jaluit, Marshall Islands,[3] at the same time as Franz Hernsheim.[4] The year after he got to German New Guinea where he lived in Matupi in Rabaul, Niu Briten (New Britain), Bismarck Archipelago where also Eduard Hernsheim lived.[2][5] Here he was manager as well as part-time owner of Hernsheim & Co. During this time he was also Norwegian consul in German New Guinea.[6]

Maximilian Franz Thiel
Born12 January 1865
Died16 May 1939 (1939-05-17) (aged 74)
Employees of the Hamburg trading company Hernsheim & Co. on Matupi, New Britain, c 1890. Managing director Max Thiel stands on the veranda holding his hat in one hand.

Ethnographic collections

An important business for him and Hernsheim & Co was ethnographic collections. He soon realised that there was much money in those collections and they were easy to sell to various travellers in the region. He stockpiled such collections at his house on Matupi but they were often poorly labeled and lacked proper categorisation, place of origin, natives name etc.[1] In 1902 Thiel hired Franz Hellwig, a former employee of the Deutsche Handels- und Plantagengesellschaft to assist him in his collecting. Hellwig had lived a long time in the region and had accumulated a large collection that was for sale.[1]

There are collections from Thiel in many museums in Europe[7][8] and the United States.

gollark: I skimmed a blog on it.
gollark: Apparently people manage to get good connections in some cities.
gollark: People mostly pick Thailand and such.
gollark: This is generally called being a "digital nomad".
gollark: Well, official sources *have* been awful about things?

References

  1. Buschmann, Rainer (2000). Exploring Tensions in Material Culture: commercialising ethnography in German New Guinea, 1870-1904. , in Hunting the Gatherers: ethnographic collectors, agents and agency in Melanesia, 1870s-1930s. p. 66. ISBN 1-57181-811-1.
  2. Epstein, A. L. (1992). In the midst of life: affect and ideation in the world of the Tolai. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-520-07562-5.
  3. Naht (1884). Auszug aus dem Tagebuch vom Jahr 1884 des Beamten Naht der Firma Hernsheim & Co auf der Insel Jaluit, die grösste der Marshallinseln, D.n:r 2890/1939, Ö.H 105/1, kept in the archive of Sjöhistoriska museet (The Maritime Museum), Stockholm.
  4. Hernsheim, Eduard (1983). South sea merchant; edited and translated by Peter Sack and Dymphna Clark. Boroko, Institute of Papua New Guinea Studies. pp. 38, 43, 98.
  5. Maaz, Klaus (2018). A Navigator´s Weather Charm from the Kaniet Islands. In Tribal Art Magazine, no 89. pp. 122–127.
  6. Regius, Helena (1999). 'Our ethnological troops in the field' Swedes and museum collecting in Melanesia circa 1900. In Craig, Barry, Kernot, B & Anderson, Christopher (red.) Art and performance in Oceania. p. 236. ISBN 0-8248-2283-8.
  7. "Collection 1913.04, Max Thiel, Etnografiska museet (Museum of Ethnography), Stockholm".
  8. "Max Thiel, Ethnologisches Museum". www.smb-digital.de. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.