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FRIEDRICH GERHARD ROHLFS (1831—1896)

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 461 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FRIEDRICH GERHARD ROHLFS (1831—1896)  , German explorer of the
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Sahara, son of a physician, was born at Vegesack, near
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Bremen, on the 14th of
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April 1831 . After the ordinary course at the gymnasium of
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Osnabruck he entered the Bremen corps in 1848, and took
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part as a volunteer in the Schleswig-Holstein
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campaign, being made an officer after the
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battle of Idstedt (
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July 185o) . He became a medical student at the
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universities of
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Heidelberg,
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Wurzburg and then GSttingen; but his natural inclination was for travelling, and in 1855 he went to Algeria and enlisted in the
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Foreign Legion . He took part in the
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conquest of Kabylia, and was decorated for bravery as Chevalier of the Legion of Honour . Having made himself master of Arabic and gained a thorough knowledge of native customs, Rohlfs went to
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Morocco in 1861; presenting himself as a Mussulman, he gained the favour of the enlightened sherif of Wazzan, and was thus enabled to travel over the length and breadth of the country . He then entered the Sahara and traversed the entire extent of the
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Wad Draa, being the second
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European (the first being Rene Caillie) to visit Tafilet . On leaving Tafilet he was robbed by his guides and
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left for dead; but two marabouts charitably succoured him and he was able to reach Algeria . When scarcely re-covered from his wounds he started once more for the Sahara (August 1862) by way of Algeria . Compelled by tribal disturbances to turn back, he went to Tangier and thence in March 1864 made a fresh start .
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Crossing the
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Atlas by an eastern route he again visited Tafilet, and thence made his way across the
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desert to the oasis of
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Tuat, which he was the first European to describe . Returning by Ghadarries and Tripoli he spent three months in Germany, and then (March 1865) went back to Tripoli, intending to explore the highlands of the Ahaggar; being prevented, however, by a war among the Tuareg, he went from Ghadames to Murzuk, where he spent five months, and thence across the Sahara to
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Bornu, mapping en route the oasis of Kawar . Rohlfs passed through Mandara and its ancient capital Mora, and struck out for the coast of the Gulf of
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Guinea .

He reached the

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Benue by way of the
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Bauchi highlands, and descended that
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river to its confluence with the Niger, which he ascended to
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Rabba . Thence he made his way on horseback to
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Lagos, reaching Liverpool on tae' 2nd of July 1867 . In the following
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year he accompanied the
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British expedition against Theodore of Abyssinia, and on his return went once more to Tripoli; whence he traversed the
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Cyrenaica, reaching
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Egypt by way of the oasis of
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Siwa (1869) . Returning home, he married and settled down in
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Weimar . He did not rest long, however, for in 1873—74 he took command of an expedition sent by the
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Khedive Ismail into the Libyan Desert, which made investigations of
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great value to science . In 1878 Rohlfs and Dr Stecker were commissioned by the German
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African Society to go to
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Wadai . They succeeded in reaching the oasis of Kufra, one of the chief centres of the Senussites, but being attacked by the
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Arabs, they were obliged to retreat, making their way to the coast at Benghazi, reached in
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October 1879 . In 188o Rohlfs accompanied Dr Stecker in an exploring expedition to Abyssinia; but after delivering a letter from the German emperor to the
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Negus, he returned to
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Europe . In 1885, when the rivalry between the British and Germans in East Africa was very. keen, Prince Bismarck appointed Rohlfs consul at
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Zanzibar, which island Bismarck desired to secure for, Germany . Rohlfs, untrained in diplomacy, was no match for
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Sir John Kirk, the British Agent, and he wa? soon recalled, and did not again visit Africa . He died at Riingsdorf, near
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Bonn, on the 2nd of
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June 1896 . Rohlfs visited many regions not before traversed by Europeans, and the value of his
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work was recognized in 1868 by the Royal
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Geographical Society, which bestowed on him the
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Patron's Medal .

Accounts of each of his expeditions, and other

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works on Africa were published by Rohlfs, including Mein Erster Aufenthalt in Marokko (Bremen, 1873;
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English edition, Travels in Morocco,
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London, 1874) ; Reise durch Marokko (Bremen, 1868) ; Over durch Afrika (
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Leipzig, 1874—75); Von Tripolis nach Alexandrien (Bremen, 1871); Expedition zur Erforschung der Libyschen .Wiiste (Cassel, 1875—76) ; Kufra: Reise von Tripolis nach der Oase Kufra (Leipzig, 1881) ;
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Land and Volk in Afrika (Bremen, 187o) ; Quid novi ex Africa ? (Cassel, 1886) . See also a
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biographical
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notice by Dr W . Wolkenhauer in the Deutsche geo . Bldtter for 1896 .

End of Article: FRIEDRICH GERHARD ROHLFS (1831—1896)
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