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Tom von Prince

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tom and Magdalene von Prince, before 1908

Tom von Prince (9 January 1866 – 4 November 1914) was a military officer and plantation owner in German East Africa. He most notably, as a captain in the Schutztruppe, led the first action by German forces in East Africa during World War I by seizing Taveta on 15 August 1914, and was then killed in November at the Battle of Tanga.

Early life

He was born on 9 January 1866, at Port Louis, Mauritius, son of Thomas Prince, police superintendent of the British island colony of Mauritius and Mary Luisa Ansorge, who had been born in Bengal to German missionaries.[1] His father died at Mauritius in 1869 and his mother died there in 1879. After he was orphaned, Prince's maternal grandparents took him to Germany, where he was enrolled at the Königliche Ritterakademie at Liegnitz (now Legnica in Poland). He continued his education at the Kassel Military Academy (Kadettenanstalt Kassel), where he was a classmate of his future superior Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck. He met his future wife Magdalene von Massow at Legnica in about 1844.

Military career

In 1887 he joined the Imperial German Army and served in the Prussian Infantry Regiment No. 99, which was stationed near Legnica. In 1889 he was promoted to the rank of Second Lieutenant, and his regiment was posted to garrison duty at Strasbourg, in German-occupied Alsace.[2] In November 1889 Prince retired from the army, and in January 1890 he joined the Kaiserliche Schutztruppe fur Deutsch-Ostafrika, then still called the Wissmann-Truppe. Prince initially participated in the suppression of the coastal insurgency, and in 1891 he took part in Wissmann's campaign to Kilimanjaro. In the following years he commanded military expeditions to subjugate the Hehe people. The Hehe, under Chief Mkwavinyika Mkwawa, had won the battle of Lugalo in 1891, where they killed Commander Emil von Zelewski and many of his men. In 1893-94 Tom Prince was sent far inland to Lake Nyassa, with a civilian representative of the Antislavery Committee, Wynecken. In September 1894 Prince joined the expedition led by Governor Friedrich von Schele which attacked and captured Mkwawa's fortress at Kalenga, although Mkwawa and most of his warriors escaped.[3]

Prince Mansion at the Sakkarani plantation (Usambara, German East Africa)

Prince interrupted his service in Africa by several stays in Germany. There, on 4 January 1896, he married Magdalene von Massow, who went with him to Africa. In 1896 he was promoted to the rank of captain and in August 1896 he established the German military station at Iringa, a short distance from Mkwawa's fortress at Kalenga. Faced with resistance from the Hehe people, he hanged Mkwawa's brother Mpangile on 21 February 1897 and sent patrols to chase Mkwawa and his last supporters.[4] As the fighting continued, Prince deliberately starved the rebels to break their will to fight.[5] On 19 July 1898, closely pursued by the Germans, the Hehe chief shot and killed himself. The soldiers brought his head back to Tom von Prince in Iringa.[6][7] Prince had one of Mkwawa's teeth set in gold as a chain pendant, which he kept in the family.[8] The skull of Mkwawa was allegedly sent to Germany and despite its alleged return in 1954, many doubt its authenticity.[9]

In August 1900, Prince left the protective force and colonial administration to settle as landowner in East Africa. Together with his wife, he founded a plantation near Sakkarani in the Usambara Mountains. In December 1906, Tom Prince was raised to the German nobility[10] and so became Tom von Prince.

World War I and Tanga

At the outbreak of the First World War Prince returned to active military service and commanded two European companies of the German Schutztruppe. He was recalled to active duty as Hauptmann (captain) and given command of the Askaris of the 13th Field Company and of the 7th and 8th Schützenkompanien (rifle companies composed mainly of the sons of German settlers). Prince's exploits earned him the nickname Bwana Sakarani — the wild one — from his Askaris.

On 15 August 1914, in the opening move of the war in East Africa, von Prince seized the Kenyan town of Taveta on orders from the commander of German forces, Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck. The objective was to take and hold a key point that would strengthen German defences in the north of their colony and protect the Usambara Railway.[11]

Tom von Prince was one of nine German officers to be killed in the Battle of Tanga on 4 November 1914.[11] He had been ordered to lead his troops into the centre of the town and was killed in fighting against the British 2nd Loyal North Lancashire Regiment that had landed as part of the British Indian Expeditionary Force. His funeral took place together with twelve other German officers in Tanga.

In popular culture

A thinly fictionalized version of Tom von Prince appears, under the name Erich von Bishop, in William Boyd's 1983 satirical anti-war novel An Ice-Cream War.

References

  1. ^ "Prince". Gothaisches genealogisches Taschenbuch der briefadeligen Häuser. 3: 599. 1909.
  2. ^ Hübner, Franz (1906). Offizier-Stammliste des 2. Oberrheinischen Infanterie-Regiments Nr. 99. Berlin: E.S. Mittler. p. 53.
  3. ^ David Pizzo, "'To Devour the Land of Mkwawa': Colonial Violence and the German-Hehe War in East Africa c. 1884-1914" (PhD thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2007).
  4. ^ LeGall, Yann (2020). Remembering the dismembered : African human remains and memory cultures in and after repatriation (Thesis). Universität Potsdam. doi:10.25932/publishup-50850.
  5. ^ "To devour the land of Mkwawa: colonial violence and the German-Hehe War in East Africa, c.1884-1914". cdr.lib.unc.edu. 2010-10-19. Retrieved 2024-02-07.
  6. ^ Prince, Magdalene von (1908). Eine deutsche Frau im Innern Deutsch-Ostafrikas: elf Jahre nach Tagebuchblättern erzählt (in German) (3rd ed.). Berlin: E.S. Mittler.
  7. ^ Prince, Magdalene von (2023). A German Woman in the East African Interior: Memoirs of the Hehe Wars in Tanzania, 1896-1898.
  8. ^ Brockmeyer, Bettina; Edward, Frank; Stoecker, Holger (May 2020). "The Mkwawa complex: A Tanzanian-European history about provenance, restitution, and politics". Journal of Modern European History. 18 (2): 117–139. doi:10.1177/1611894420909033. ISSN 1611-8944.
  9. ^ Brockmeyer, Bettina; Edward, Frank; Stoecker, Holger (May 2020). "The Mkwawa complex: A Tanzanian-European history about provenance, restitution, and politics". Journal of Modern European History. 18 (2): 117–139. doi:10.1177/1611894420909033. ISSN 1611-8944.
  10. ^ Gaudi, Robert (2017). African Kaiser: General Paul Von Lettow-Vorbeck and the Great War in Africa, 1914–1918. Penguin. ISBN 9780425283714.
  11. ^ a b Paice, Edward (2007). Tip and Run: The Untold Tragedy of the Great War in Africa. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 19,57,244. ISBN 9-780297-847090.

Works

Literature

  • Herbert Viktor Patera: Der weiße Herr Ohnefurcht – Das Leben des Schutztruppenhauptmanns Tom von Prince. Deutscher Verlag, Berlin 1939.
  • Hans Schmiedel: "Bwana Sakkarani – Der Schutztruppenhauptmann Tom von Prince und seine Zeit". Handschriftliches Manuskript
This page was last edited on 30 March 2024, at 06:34
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