♀ Phoebe Clothilde COE
Eigenschaften
Art |
Wert |
Datum |
Ort |
Quellenangaben |
Name
|
Phoebe Clothilde COE |
|
|
|
Beruf
|
Plantagenbetreiberin |
nach 1881 |
Mioko (Duke-of-York-Inseln) nach diesem Ort suchen |
|
Besitz
|
Enteignung |
nach 1922 |
Kuradui, Neupommern (Neubritannien), Papua-Neuguinea nach diesem Ort suchen |
|
Notizen zu dieser Person
(auch "Phebe")
Max Uechtritz 2020: "Phebe died in a Japanese POW camp in WW2 but her remains were only found, then returned in 2004 by her grandson Alf, who fulfilled the written and verbal wishes of the woman who raised him by placing her with her husband.
The local clans – Kuradui, Tolom, Raluana, Vunatagia, Bitasquo and Karavi – knew the family lore well. It’d come down via oral history for generations - and had been written about extensively in books by and about famous anthropologist and botanist Richard Parkinson and his translator wife Phebe, even more respected and loved.
They knew how Phebe had refused the urgings of her sister, known as Queen Emma, to leave New Guinea and join her in Sydney when she sold off her estates in 1911. “How can I leave,” said Phebe. 'This is my land and these are my people.'
They also knew how Phebe – in the very early settlement days in the 1880s – had saved the lives of village children orphaned by tribal warfare. She ‘bought’ them off the victors who’d planned a life of slavery and misery for their human trophies. Phebe either raised them herself or put them in the Catholic mission. Phebe was known as “Miti” (Mother) by the local Tolais."
Quellenangaben
1 |
https://www.pngaa.net/Photo_Gallery/QueenEmma/intro.htm https://oceanicart.com/PROVENANCE/Richard-and-Phebe-Parkinson/1 http://www.jje.info/lostlives/exhib/parkinsonpc/ http://www.jje.info/lostlives/exhib/potp/rollofhonour3.html; Overell, Lilian, A Woman's Impressions of German New Guinea (1929)
|
Datenbank
Titel |
Vorfahren und Nachfahren von Carl Diercke und ihr familiäres Umfeld |
Beschreibung |
Der Geograph Carl Diercke entwickelte für George Westermann, Braunschweig, den bekannten Schulatlas. Dafür war er selber eher mit dem Finger auf der Landkarte unterwegs. Seine Kinder zog es aber wirklich in die weite Welt hinaus und sie erlebten das Ende der Kolonialzeit im heutigen Papua-Neuguinea. Die Nachfahren leben inzwischen in Australien. |
Hochgeladen |
2024-02-15 14:05:21.0 |
Einsender |
Reinhold
Schlimm
|
E-Mail |
rs-dosen@freenet.de |
Zeige alle Personen dieser Datenbank |
Herunterladen
Der Einsender hat das Herunterladen der Datei nicht gestattet.