Johann Christian Friedrich Heidmann
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Johann Christian Friedrich (Fritz) Heidmann (November 1 1834 – June 30, 1913) was a German missionary and botanical collector who was born near Lübeck.
Trained as a glazier, Heidmann joined the Rhenish Missionary Society in 1861. As a member of this group, he began work as a missionary in Cape Colony in 1865. A few years later, along with approximately 90 Baster families, he relocated to the deserted village of Rehoboth. At Rehoboth he would serve his congregation until his retirement in 1906.
During warfare between the Ovaherero and the Namaqua, Heidmann acted as mediator at peace talks between the Basters and Ovaherero, and in the early 1890s he worked closely with German authorities to secure Baster cooperation against Namaqua leader Hendrik Witbooi (1825-1905).
In 1886, he was visited by Swiss botanist Hans Schinz (1858-1941), with whom Heidmann agreed to collect and ship botanical specimens from German Southwest Africa to Zurich. Schinz would later name the plant species Crotalaria heidmannii after him. Heidmann suffered from dementia later in life, and died in a mental institution near Cape Town.
References[]
- Aluka Heidmann, Johann Christian Friedrich (Fritz) (1834-1913)
- Biographies of Namibian Personalities by Klaus Dierks
- German Protestant missionaries
- 1834 births
- 1913 deaths
- Clergy from Lübeck
- Protestant missionaries in Namibia
- Protestant missionaries in South Africa
- German expatriates in South Africa
- Missionary botanists
- Namibian people stubs