German colonization of the Americas
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German attempts at the colonization of the Americas consisted of German Venezuela (Template:Lang-de, also Template:Lang-de[1]), St. Thomas and Crab Island in the 16th and 17th centuries.
History
Vinland
The Norse Saga of the Greenlanders mentions Tyrker, a foreign companion of Leif Erikson in his expedition to North America (Vinland) around year 1000. It has been interpreted that his origin is German.[2]
Klein-Venedig
Klein-Venedig ("Little Venice"; also the etymology of the name "Venezuela") was the most significant part of the German colonization of the Americas, from 1528 to 1546, in which the Augsburg-based Welser banking family to the Habsburgs was given the colonial rights by Emperor Charles V, who was also King of Spain and owed debts to them for his Imperial election.[3] In 1528, Charles V issued a charter by which the Welsers possessed the rights to explore, rule and colonize the area with the primary motivation of searching for the legendary golden city of El Dorado.[4][5] The venture was initially led by Ambrosius Ehinger, who founded Maracaibo in 1529. After the deaths of first Ehinger (1533), Nikolaus Federmann, Georg von Speyer (1540), Philipp von Hutten continued exploration in the interior. In absence of von Hutten from the capital of the province the crown of Spain claimed the right to appoint the governor. The Spanish Juan de Carvajal was nominated governor by the Emperor Charles V and tried to take control of the province. In 1545 he founded El Tocuyo with german colonists of Coro. On Hutten's return to the capital, Santa Ana de Coro, in 1546, the governor Carvajal had Hutten and Bartholomeus VI. Welser executed. Subsequently, Charles V revoked Welser's charter.
The Welsers transported German miners to the colony, as well as 4,000 African slaves as labor to work sugar cane plantations. Many of the German colonists died from tropical diseases, to which they had no immunity, or during frequent wars with Native Americans.
Brandenburg-Prussia
The Brandenburgisch-Africanische Compagnie of Brandenburg (the future Kingdom of Prussia) established trading posts in Africa and leased a trading post on St. Thomas from the Danish West India-Guinea Company in 1685. In 1693, the Danes seized the post, its warehouse, and all its goods without warning or repayment. There were no permanent German settlers.
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Duchy of Courland
The Duchy of Courland, a German-led vassal state of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, leased New Courland (Neu-Kurland) on Tobago in the Caribbean from the British. The colony failed and was restored several times. A final Courish attempt to establish a Caribbean colony involved a settlement near modern Toco on Trinidad.[6]
County of Hanau
The counties of Hanau-Lichtenberg and Hanau-Münzenberg, under Frederick Casimir and his adviser Johann Becher, funded – but did not complete – an extravagant program to lease Guiana from the Dutch West India Company. Calling his new realm the Hanauish-Indies (Hanauisch-Indien), Frederick Casimir ran up huge debts that ultimately forced him into a regency by some of his relatives.
Later immigration
German settlers also immigrated to the established colonies in South America and Central America:[citation needed]
- El Tocuyo, Venezuela
- Colonia Tovar, Venezuela
- Chile's Southern Zone
- Matagalpa (Nicaragua)
- Southern Brazil
- Bariloche, and Patagonia, Argentina
- Colonia General Belgrano, in Córdoba, Argentina
- Obera, in Misiones, Argentina
- Soconusco region in Chiapas, Mexico
- Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
- Pozuzo and Oxapampa in Peru
- Seaford Town in Jamaica
- Colonia Dignidad in Chile
They also founded some small communities in Paraguay.
See also
- German interest in the Caribbean, German efforts in 1867–1917
- German colonial empire, after 1880
- German Argentine
- German Brazilian
- German Chilean
- German Peruvian
- Germans of Paraguay
- German Venezuelan
- Nueva Germania
- Tapachula
- Pozuzo, a Peruvian community of German origin.
- Blumenau
- Gramado
- Pennsylvania Dutch, a U.S. community of German origin.
- German-American
- German Colombian
References
- ^ Zantop, Susanne (1999). Kolonialphantasien im vorkolonialen Deutschland (1770-1870). ISBN 9783503049400.
- ^ Brown, Madelaine R.; Magoun, Francis P. (1946). "Tyrkir, First German in North America". Modern Language Notes. 61 (8): 547–551. doi:10.2307/2909117. ISSN 0149-6611. JSTOR 2909117. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
- ^ Cachero Vinuesa, Montserrat. "The Court and the Jungle: Integrating Narratives of Privilege" (Document). Universidad Pablo de Olavide.
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ignored (help) - ^ Various. (2021). Routledge Library Editions: World Empires. United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis.
- ^ South American Explorers Club (1979). South American Explorer. South American Explorers Club.
- ^ Kołodziejczyk, Dariusz. Mówią wieki. "CZY RZECZPOSPOLITA MIAŁA KOLONIE W AFRYCE I AMERYCE? Archived 24 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine". (in Polish)
Further reading
- Arciniegas, German (1943). Germans in the Conquest of America. Translated by Flores, Angel. Macmillan Company.
- Labell, Shellie. "Sixteenth-Century German Participation in New World Colonization: A Historiography".
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(help) - Lacas, M. M. (1953). "A Sixteenth-Century German Colonizing Venture in Venezuela". The Americas. 9 (3): 275–290. doi:10.2307/977995. ISSN 0003-1615. JSTOR 977995. S2CID 144183481.
- Moses, Bernard (1914). "Chapter IV, The Welser Company in Venezuala". The Spanish Dependencies in South America. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 57–79.
- Townsend, Mary Evelyn (1930). The Rise and Fall of Germany's Colonial Empire, 1884-1918. Internet Archive. New York, Macmillan.