- Source: Karl Ebermaier
Karl Ebermaier (Elberfeld, 2 October 1862 – Bernried am Starnberger See, 21 August 1943) was between 1912 and 1916 the last governor of German Kamerun.
Life
He was the son of State Procurator Friedrich Wilhelm Ebermaier. He studied law in Tübingen and was a member of the Corps Rhenania.
He worked in Germany until 1898, when he became Supreme Judge of German East Africa, but was called back to Germany after a duel-scandal. In 1902 he was sent to Kamerun as first Referent and deputy Governor. On 29 March 1912, he replaced Otto Gleim as Governor of Kamerun.
It was in that function that he was confronted with a Franco-British-Belgian invasion after the outbreak of the First World War on 4 August 1914. Formally commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Ebermaier left Major Carl Heinrich Zimmermann direct the military operations. By 1916, the situation was so desperate that Ebermaier, with the majority of the Colonial administration, fled to neutral Spanish Guinea. Ebermaier was interned in Madrid and led there until 1919 the Internment Administration.
See also
Kamerun campaign
References
External links
Newspaper clippings about Karl Ebermaier in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kamerun Jerman
- Karl Ebermaier
- Decolonisation of Africa
- List of colonial governors of Cameroon
- 1912 in Germany
- Index of Cameroon-related articles
- Kamerun
- 1913 in Germany
- African theatre of World War I
- Kivu frontier incident
- Kamerun campaign