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Sven Anders Hedin KNO1kl RVO (19 February 1865 – 26 November 1952) was a Swedish geographer, topographer, explorer, photographer, and travel writer, as well as an illustrator of his own works. During four expeditions to Central Asia he discovered the Transhimalaya (once named the Hedin Range in his honor) and the sources of the Brahmaputra, Indus and Sutlej Rivers, Lake Lop Nur, and the remains of cities, grave sites and the Great Wall of China in the deserts of the Tarim Basin. The posthumous publication of his Central Asia atlas marked the conclusion of his life’s work. At 15 years of age, Sven Hedin witnessed the triumphal return of the Arctic explorer Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld after his first navigation of the Northern Sea Route. From that moment on, young Sven aspired to become an explorer. His studies under the German geographer and China expert Ferdinand Freiherr von Richthofen awakened a love of Germany in Sven and strengthened his resolve to undertake expeditions to Central Asia in order to explore the last uncharted areas of Asia. After obtaining a doctorate, learning several languages and dialects, and undertaking two trips through Persia, he ignored the advice of Ferdinand von Richthofen to continue his geographic studies in order to acquaint himself with geographical research methodology; the result was that Hedin had to leave the evaluation of his expedition results later to other scientists. Between 1894 and 1908, in three daring expeditions through the mountains and deserts of Central Asia, he mapped and researched parts of Chinese Turkestan (officially Xinjiang) and Tibet which had been unexplored until then. Upon his return to Stockholm in 1909 he was received as triumphantly as Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld. In 1902 he became the last Swede (to date) to be raised to the untitled nobility and was considered one of Sweden’s most important personalities. As a member of two scientific academies, he had a voice in the selection of Nobel Prize winners for both science and literature. Hedin never married and had no children, rendering his family line now extinct. Hedin's expedition notes laid the foundations for a precise mapping of Central Asia. He was one of the first European scientific explorers to use native born scientists and research assistants on his expeditions. Although primarily an explorer, he was also the first to unearth the ruins of ancient Buddhist cities in Chinese Central Asia. However, as his main interest in archaeology was finding ancient cities, he had little interest in performing thorough excavations. Of small stature, with a bookish, bespectacled appearance, Hedin nevertheless proved himself a determined explorer, surviving several close brushes with death from hostile forces and the elements over his long career. His scientific documentation and popular travelogues, illustrated with his own photographs, watercolor paintings and drawings, his adventure stories for young readers and his lecture tours abroad made him world famous. As a proven expert on Turkestan and Tibet, he was able to obtain unrestricted access to European and Asian monarchs and politicians as well as to their geographical societies and scholarly associations. They all sought to purchase his exclusive knowledge about the power vacuum in Central Asia with medals, diamond encrusted grand crosses, gold medals, honorary doctorates and splendid receptions, as well as with logistic and financial support for his expeditions. Hedin, in addition to Nikolai Przhevalsky and Sir Francis Younghusband, Sir Aurel Stein, were active players in the British - Russian struggle for influence in Central Asia, the Great Game. Their travels were supported because they filled in the "white spaces" in contemporary maps, providing valuable information. Sven Hedin was and remained a figure of the 19th century who clung to its visions and methods also in the 20th century. This prevented him from discerning the fundamental social and political upheavals of the 20th century and aligning his thinking and actions accordingly. Concerned about the security of Scandinavia he favored the construction of the battleship Sverige. In World War I he specifically allied himself in his publications with the German monarchy and its conduct of the war. Because of this political involvement he lost his scientific reputation with Germany’s wartime enemies, his membership in their geographical societies and learned associations, as well as any support for his planned expeditions. After a not very successful lecture tour in 1923 through North America and Japan, he traveled on to Peking to carry out an expedition to Chinese Turkestan, but the unstable political situation thwarted this intention. He instead traveled through Mongolia by car and through Siberia with the Trans - Siberian Railway. With financial support from the governments of Sweden and Germany he led, between 1927 and 1935, an international and interdisciplinary Sino - Swedish Expedition to carry out scientific investigations in Mongolia and Chinese Turkestan, with participation of 37 scientists from six countries. Despite Chinese counter demonstrations and after months of negotiations in China, he was able to make the expedition also a Chinese one by obtaining Chinese research commissions and the participation of Chinese scientists. He also concluded a contract which guaranteed freedom of travel for this expedition, which because of its arms, 300 camels, and activities in a war theater resembled an invading army. However, the financing remained Hedin's private responsibility. Because of failing health, the civil war in Chinese Turkestan, and a long period of captivity, Sven Hedin, now 70 years of age, had a difficult time after the currency depreciation of the Great Depression raising the money required for the expedition, the logistics for assuring the supplying of the expedition in a war arena, and obtaining access for the expedition’s participants to a research area intensely contested by warlords. Nevertheless, the expedition was a scientific success. The archaeological artifacts which had been sent to Sweden were scientifically assessed for three years, after which they were returned to China under the terms of the contract. Starting
in
1937, the scientific material assembled during the
expedition was published in over 50 volumes by Sven
Hedin and other expedition participants, thereby
making it available for worldwide research on eastern
Asia. When he ran out of money to pay printing costs,
he pawned his extensive and valuable library, which
filled several rooms, making possible the publication
of additional volumes. In 1935 Hedin made his exclusive knowledge about central Asia available, not only to the Swedish government, but also to foreign governments such as China and Germany, in lecturers and personal discussions with political representatives of Chiang Kai-shek and Adolf Hitler. Although he was not a National Socialist, Sven Hedin’s incredible naivety and gullibility as well as his illusive hope that Nazi Germany would protect Scandinavia from invasion by the Soviet Union brought him in dangerous proximity to representatives of National Socialism, who exploited him as an author. This destroyed his reputation and put him into social and scientific isolation. However, in correspondence and personal conversations with leading Nazis his successful intercessions achieved the pardoning of ten people condemned to death and for the release or survival of Jews who had been deported to German concentration camps. At the end of the war U.S. troops deliberately confiscated the documents relating to Hedin’s planned Central Asia atlas. The U.S. Army Map Service later solicited Sven Hedin’s assistance and financed the printing and publication of his life’s work, the Central Asia atlas. Whoever compares this atlas with Adolf Stielers Hand Atlas of 1891 can appreciate what Sven Hedin accomplished between 1893 and 1935. The maps were used by the U.S. Army to interpret satellite images and by U.S. Air Force pilots during the war in Afghanistan. Although Sven Hedin's research was taboo in Germany and Sweden because of his conduct relating to Nazi Germany, and stagnated for decades in Germany, the scientific documentation of his expeditions was translated into Chinese by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and incorporated into Chinese research. Following the recommendations made by Sven Hedin to the Chinese government in 1935, the routes he selected were used to construct streets and train tracks, as well as dams and canals to irrigate new farms being established in the Tarim and Yanji basins and the deposits of iron, manganese, oil, coal and gold discovered during the Sino - Swedish Expedition were opened up for mining. Among the discoveries of this expedition should also be counted the many Asian plants and animals unheard of until that date, as well as fossil remains of dinosaurs and extinct horned animals. All of them were named after Hedin, the scientific classification suffix being hedini. But one discovery remained unknown to Chinese researchers until the turn of the millennium: in the Lop Nur desert, Sven Hedin discovered in 1933 and 1934 ruins of signal towers which prove that the Great Wall of China once extended to Xinjiang. From 1931 until his death in 1952 Sven Hedin lived in Stockholm in a modern high rise in a preferred location, the address being Norr Mälarstrand 66. He lived with his siblings in the upper three stories and from the balcony he had a wide view over Riddarfjärden Bay and Lake Mälaren to the island of Långholmen. In the entryway to the stairwell is to be found a decorative stucco relief map of Sven Hedin’s research area in Central Asia and a relief of the Lama temple, a copy of which he had brought to Chicago to the 1933 World's Fair. On October 29, 1952, Hedin's will granted the rights to his books and his extensive personal effects to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences; the Sven Hedin Foundation established soon thereafter holds all the rights of ownership. Hedin
died
at Stockholm in 1952. The memorial service was
attended by representatives of the Swedish royal
household, the Swedish government, the Swedish Academy
and the diplomatic service. He was buried in the
cemetery of Adolf Fredrik church in
Stockholm. Hedin was born at Stockholm. When he was 15 years old Sven Hedin witnessed the triumphal return of the Swedish Arctic explorer Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld after his first navigation of the Northern Sea Route. He describes this experience in his book My Life as an Explorer as follows:
In May, 1885, Sven Hedin graduated from Beskowska secondary school in Stockholm. He then accepted an offer to accompany the student Erhard Sandgren as his private tutor to Baku, where Sandgren's father was working as an engineer in the oil fields of Robert Nobel. Afterward he attended a course in topography for general staff officers for one month in summer 1885 and took a few weeks of instruction in portrait drawing; this comprised his entire training in those areas. On August 15, 1885, he traveled to Baku with Erhard Sandgren and instructed him there for seven months, and he himself began to learn the Latin, French, German, Persian, Russian, English and Tatar languages. He later learned several Persian dialects as well as Turkish, Kyrgyz, Mongolian, Tibetan and some Chinese. On April 6, 1886, Sven Hedin left Baku, travelling by paddle steamer over the Caspian Sea, riding through the Alborz Range to Teheran, Isfahan, Shiraz and the harbor city of Bushehr. From there he took a ship up the Tigris River to Baghdad, returning to Teheran via Kermanshah, and then travelling through the Caucasus and over the Black Sea to Constantinopole. Hedin then returned to Sweden, arriving on September 18, 1886. In 1887, Hedin published a book about these travels entitled Through Persia, Mesopotamia and the Caucasus. From 1886 to 1888 Sven Hedin studied under the geologist Waldemar Brøgger in Stockholm and Uppsala the subjects of geology, mineralogy, zoology and Latin. In December 1888 he became a Candidate in Philosophy. From October 1889 to March 1890 he studied in Berlin under Ferdinand Freiherr von Richthofen. On October 12, 1890, he
accompanied as interpreter and vice consul a
Swedish legation to Persia which
was to present the Shah of
Persia with the insignia of the Order
of the Seraphine. As part of the Swedish
legation he was at an audience of the shah Naser al-Din Shah Qajar in Teheran.
He spoke with him and later accompanied him to the Elburz Mountain
Range. On July 11, 1891, he and three others
climbed Mount Damavand where
he collected primary material for his
dissertation. Starting in September he traveled on
the Silk Road via the
cities Mashhad, Ashgabat, Bukhara, Samarkand, Tashkent and Kashgar to
the western outskirts of the Taklamakan desert.
On the trip home he visited the grave of the
Russian Asian scholar Nikolai Przhevalsky in Karakol on
the shore of Lake Issyk Kul. On March
29, 1891, he was back in Stockholm. He published
the books King
Oscars Legation to the Shah of Persia in 1890 and Through
Chorasan and Turkestan about this journey. On April 27, 1892, Sven Hedin traveled to Berlin to continue his studies under Ferdinand Freiherr von Richthofen. Beginning of July he went to University of Halle - Wittenberg, Halle, attending lectures by Alfred Kirchhoff. Yet in the same month, he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy with a 28 page dissertation entitled Personal Observations of Damavand. This dissertation is a summary of one part of his book, King Oscars Legation to the Shah of Persia in 1890. Eric Wennerholm remarked on the subject:
Ferdinand Freiherr von Richthofen not only encouraged Hedin to absolve cursory studies, but also to become thoroughly acquainted with all branches of geographic science and the methodologies of the salient research work, so that he could later work as an explorer. Sven Hedin abstained from doing this with an explanation he supplied in old age:
Sven
Hedin
had therewith decided to become an explorer. He was
attracted to the idea of traveling to the last
mysterious portions of Asia and filling in the gaps by
mapping an area completely unknown in Europe. As an
explorer, Hedin became important for the Asian and
European powers, who courted him, invited him to give
numerous lectures, and hoped to obtain from him in
return topographic, economic and strategic information
about inner Asia, which they considered part of their
sphere of influence. As the era of discovery came to a
close around 1920, Sven Hedin contented himself with
organizing the Sino - Swedish Expedition for qualified
scientific explorers. Between 1893 and 1897, Sven Hedin investigated the Pamir Mountains, travelling through the Tarim Basin in Xinjiang region, across the Taklamakan Desert, Lake Kara - Koshun and Lake Bosten, proceeding to study northern Tibet. He covered 26,000 kilometres (16,000 mi) on this journey and mapped 10,498 kilometres (6,523 mi) of them on 552 sheets. Approximately 3,600 kilometres (2,200 mi) led through previously uncharted areas. He started out on this expedition on October 16, 1893, from Stockholm, travelling via Saint Petersburg and Tashkent to the Pamir Mountains. Several attempts to climb the 7,546 metres (24,757 ft) high Muztagata — called the Father of the Glaciers — in the Pamir Mountains were unsuccessful. He remained in Kashgar until April, 1895 and then left on April 10 with three local escorts from the village of Merket in order to cross the Taklamakan Desert via Tusluk to the Khotan River. Since their water supply was insufficient, seven camels died of thirst, as did two of his escorts (according to Sven Hedin’s dramatized and probably unhistoric account). Bruno Baumann traveled on this route in April, 2000 with a camel caravan and ascertained that at least one of the escorts who, according to Hedin, had died of thirst had survived, and that it is impossible for a camel caravan traveling in springtime on this route to carry enough drinking water for both camels and travelers. According to other sources, Hedin had neglected to completely fill the drinking water containers for his caravan at the beginning of the expedition and set out for the desert with only half as much water as could actually be carried. When he noticed the mistake it was too late to return. Obsessed by his urge to carry out his research, Hedin deserted the caravan and proceeded alone on horseback with his servant. When that escort also collapsed from thirst, Hedin left him behind as well, but managed to reach a water source at the last desperate moment. He did, however, return to his servant with water and rescued him. Nevertheless, his ruthless behavior earned him massive criticism. In
January, 1896, after a stopover in Kashgar, Hedin
visited the 1,500 year old abandoned cities of Dandan Oilik and Kara Dung, which are located northeast of Khotan in
the Taklamakan desert. Beginning of March he
discovered Lake Bosten, one of the largest inland
waters of central Asia. He reported that this lake is
supplied by a single mighty feeder stream, the Kaidu River. He mapped
Lake Kara - Koshun and returned on May 27 to Khotan.
On June 29, he started out from there with his caravan
across northern Tibet and China to Beijing, where he
arrived on March 2, 1897. He returned to Stockholm via
Mongolia and Russia. Another expedition in Central Asia followed in 1899 - 1902 through the Tarim Basin, Tibet and Kashmir to Calcutta. Hedin navigated the Yarkand, Tarim and Kaidu rivers and found the dry riverbed of the Kum-darja as well as the dried out lake bed of the Lop Nur. Near Lop Nur, he discovered the ruins of the 340 by 310 metres (1,120 by 1,020 ft) former walled royal city and later Chinese garrison town of Lulan, containing the brick building of the Chinese military commander, a stupa, and 19 dwellings built of poplar wood. He also found a wooden wheel from a horse drawn cart (called an arabas) as well as several hundred documents written on wood, paper and silk in the Kharosthi script. These provided information about the history of the city of Loulan, which had once been located on the shores of Lop Nur but had been abandoned around the year 330 CE because the lake had dried out, depriving the inhabitants of drinking water. During his travels in 1900 and 1901 he attempted in vain to reach the city of Lhasa, which was forbidden to Europeans. He continued to Leh, in Ladakh district, India. From Leh, Hedin's route took him to Lahore, Delhi, Agra, Lucknow, Benares to Calcutta, meeting there with George Nathaniel Curzon, England's then viceroy to India. This
expedition resulted in 1,149 pages of maps, on which
Hedin depicted newly discovered land. He was the first
to describe yardang formations in
the Lop desert. Between 1905 and 1908 he investigated the Central Persian desert basins, the western highlands of Tibet and the Transhimalaya, which for a time was afterward called the Hedin Range. He visited the 9th Panchen Lama in the cloister city of Tashilhunpo in Shigatse. Sven Hedin was the first European to reach the Kailash region, the sacred Lake Manasarovar and the sacred Mount Kailash, the midpoint of the earth according to Buddhist and Hindu mythology. The most important goal of the expedition was the search for the sources of the Indus and Brahmaputra Rivers, both of which Hedin found. From India he returned via Japan and Russia to Stockholm. He returned from this expedition with a collection of rock samples as geological material which are kept and studied in the depot of the Bavarian State Collection of Paleontology and Geology of Munich University. These sedimentary rocks — such as breccia, conglomerate, limestone, and slate, as well as volcanic rock and granite — highlight the geological diversity of the regions visited by Sven Hedin during this expedition.
In 1923 Sven Hedin traveled to
Peking via the USA — where he visited the Grand Canyon —
and Japan. Because of tumult in China he had to
abandon an expedition to Xinjiang. Instead,
he traveled with Frans August Larson (called
the Duke of Mongolia) in November and December in
a Dodge automobile
from Peking through Mongolia via Ulaanbaatar to Ulan-Ude, and from
there with the Trans-Siberian Railway to Moscow. Between 1927 and 1935 Sven Hedin led an international Sino - Swedish Expedition which investigated the meteorological, topographic and prehistoric situation in Mongolia, the Gobi desert and Xinjiang. Sven Hedin described it as a peripatetic university in which the participating scientists worked almost independently, while he — like a local manager — negotiated with the authorities, made decisions, organized whatever was necessary, raised funds and recorded the route followed. He gave archaeologists, astronomers, botanists, geographers, geologists, meteorologists and zoologists from Sweden, Germany and China an opportunity to participate in the expedition and carry out research in their areas of specialty. Hedin
met Chiang Kai-shek in Nanjing, who thereupon
became a patron of the expedition. The Sino - Swedish
Expedition was honored with a Chinese postage stamp
series which had a print run of 25,000. The four
stamps show camels at a camp with the expedition flag
and bear the Chinese text, "Postal Service of the
Prosperous Middle Kingdom" and in Latin underneath,
"Scientific Expedition to the Northwestern Province of
China 1927 - 1933". A painting in the Beijing Palace Museum entitled Nomads
in the Desert served
as
model for the series. Of the 25,000 sets, 4,000 were
sold across the counter and 21,500 came into the
possession of the expedition. Sven Hedin used them to
finance the expedition, selling them for a price of
five dollars per stamp. The first part of the expedition from 1927 to 1932 led from Beijing via Baotou to Mongolia, over the Gobi desert, through Xinjiang to Ürümqi, and into the northern and eastern parts of the Tarim Basin. The expedition had a wealth of scientific results which are being published up to the present time. For example, the discovery of specific deposits of iron, manganese, oil, coal and gold reserves was of great economic relevance for China. In recognition of his achievements, the Berlin Geographical Society presented him with the Ferdinand von Richthofen Medal in 1933; the same honor was also awarded to Erich von Drygalski for his Gauss Expedition to the Antarctic; and to Alfred Philippson for his research on the Aegean Region. From the end of 1933 to 1934, Hedin led — on behalf of the Kuomintang government under Chiang Kai-shek in Nanjing — a Chinese expedition to investigate irrigation measures and draw up plans and maps for the construction of two roads suitable for automobiles along the Silk Road from Beijing to Xinjiang. Following his plans, major irrigation facilities were constructed, settlements erected, and roads built on the Silk Road from Beijing to Kashgar, which made it possible to completely bypass the rough terrain of Tarim Basin. One aspect of the geography of central Asia which intensively occupied Hedin for decades was what he called the “wandering lake” Lop Nur. In May 1934, he began a river expedition to this lake. For two months he navigated the Kaidu River and the Kum-Darja to Lop Nur, which had been filled with water since 1921. After the lake dried out in 1971 as a consequence of irrigation activities, the above-mentioned transportation link enabled the People’s Republic of China to construct a nuclear weapon test site in Lop Nur. His caravan of truck lorries was hijacked by the Chinese Muslim General Ma Zhongying who was retreating from northern Xinjiang along with his Kuomintang 36th Division (National Revolutionary Army) from the Soviet Invasion of Xinjiang. While Sven was detained by Ma Zhongying, he met General Ma Hushan, and Kemal Kaya Effendi. For the return trip Sven Hedin selected the southern Silk Road route via Hotan to Xi'an, where the expedition arrived on February 7, 1935. He continued on to Beijing to meet with President Lin Sen and to Nanjing to Chiang Kai-shek. He celebrated his 70th birthday on February 19, 1935 in the presence of 250 members of the Kuomintang government, to whom he reported interesting facts about the Sino - Swedish Expedition. On this day he was awarded the Brilliant Jade Order Second Class. At
the
end of the expedition, Sven Hedin was in a difficult
financial situation. He had considerable debts at the
German - Asian Bank in Beijing, which he repaid with
the royalties and fees received for his books and
lectures. In the months after his return, he held 111
lectures in 91 German cities as well as 19 lectures in
neighboring countries. To accomplish this lecture
tour, he covered a stretch as long as the equator,
23,000 kilometres (14,000 mi) by train and 17,000
kilometres (11,000 mi) by car — in a time period
of five months. He met Adolf Hitler in Berlin before
his lecture on April 14, 1935. Hedin was a monarchist. From 1905 onwards he took a stand against the move toward democracy in his Swedish homeland. He warned of the dangers he assumed to be coming from Russia and called for military armament. August Strindberg was one of his opponents on this issue, which divided Swedish politics at the time. In 1912 Hedin publicly supported the Swedish Battleship Society. He helped collect public donations for the building of the battleship HMS Sverige, which the Liberal and anti - militarist government of Karl Staaff had been unwilling to finance. He developed a lasting affinity for the German empire, with which he became acquainted during his studies. This is also shown in his admiration for Kaiser Wilhelm II, whom he even visited in exile in the Netherlands. Influenced by imperial Russian and later the Soviet Union's attempts to dominate and control territories outside its borders, especially in Central Asia and Turkestan, Hedin felt that Soviet Russia posed a great threat to the West, which may be part of the reason why he supported Germany during both World Wars. He
viewed World War I as a struggle of the German race
(particularly against Russia) and took sides in books
like Ein
Volk in Waffen. Den deutschen Soldaten gewidmet (A People
in Arms. Dedicated to the German Soldier). As a
consequence, he lost friends in France and England and
was expelled from the British Royal Geographical Society, and from the
Imperial Russian Geographical Society. Germany’s
defeat in World War I and the associated loss of its
international reputation affected him deeply. That
Sweden gave asylum to Wolfgang Kapp as a
political refugee after the failure of the Kapp Putsch
is said to be primarily attributable to his efforts. Sven Hedin's conservative and pro-German views eventually translated into sympathy for the Third Reich, and this would draw him into increasing controversy towards the end of his life. Adolf Hitler had been an early admirer of Hedin, who was in turn impressed with Hitler's nationalism. He saw the German leader's rise to power as a revival of German fortunes, and welcomed its challenge against Soviet Communism. He was not an entirely uncritical supporter of the Nazis, however. His own views were shaped by traditionalist, Christian and conservative values, while National Socialism was in part a modern revolutionary - populist movement. Hedin objected to some aspects of National Socialist rule, and occasionally attempted to convince the German government to relent in its anti - religious and anti - Semitic campaigns. Hedin met Adolf Hitler and other leading National Socialists repeatedly and was in regular correspondence with them. The politely worded correspondence usually concerned scheduling matters, birthday congratulations, Sven Hedin’s planned or completed publications, and requests by Sven Hedin for pardons for people condemned to death, and for mercy, release and permission to leave the country for people interned in prisons or concentration camps. In correspondence with Joseph Goebbels and Hans Dräger, Sven Hedin was able to achieve the printing of the Daily Watchwords year after year. The Nazis attempted to achieve a close connection to Sven Hedin by bestowing awards on him. They asked him to present an address on Sport as a Teacher at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin’s Olympic stadium. They made him an honorary member of the German - Swedish Union Berlin (German: Deutsch - Schwedischen Vereinigung Berlin e.V.) In 1938 they presented him with the City of Berlin’s Badge of Honor (German: Ehrenplakette der Stadt Berlin). For his 75th birthday on 19 February 1940 they awarded him the Order of the German Eagle; shortly before that date it had been presented to Henry Ford and Charles Lindbergh. On New Year’s Day 1943 they released the Oslo professor of philology and university rector Didrik Arup Seip from the Sachsenhausen concentration camp at Sven Hedin’s request in order to obtain Hedin's agreement to accept additional honors during the 470th anniversary of Munich University. On January 15, 1943, he received the Gold Medal of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Goldmedaille der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften). On January 16, 1943 he received an honorary doctorate from the faculty of natural sciences of Munich University. On the same day, the Nazis founded in his absence the Sven Hedin Institute for Innerasian Research located at Mittersill Castle, which was supposed to serve the long term advancement of the scientific legacy of Sven Hedin and Wilhelm Filchner as Asian experts. However, it was instead misused by Heinrich Himmler as an institute of the Research Association for German Genealogical Inheritance (Forschungsgemeinschaft Deutsches Ahnenerbe e.V.). On January 21, 1943, he was requested to sign the Golden Book of the city of Munich. Sven Hedin supported the Nazis in his journalistic activities. After the collapse of Nazi Germany, he did not regret his collaboration with the Nazis because this cooperation had made it possible to rescue numerous Nazi victims from execution, or death in extermination camps. Johannes Paul wrote in 1954 about Sven Hedin:
In 1937 Sven Hedin refused to publish his book Deutschland und der Weltfrieden in Germany because the Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda insisted on the deletion of Nazi critical passages. In a letter Hedin wrote to State Secretary Walther Funk dated April 16, 1937, it becomes clear what his criticism of National Socialism was in this time before the establishment of extermination camps:
Sven
Hedin later published this book in Sweden. After he refused to remove his criticism of National Socialism from his book Deutschland und der Weltfrieden, the Nazis confiscated the passports of Hedin’s Jewish friend Alfred Philippson and his family in 1938 in order to prevent their intended departure to American exile and retain them in Germany as a bargaining chip when dealing with Hedin. The consequence was that Sven Hedin expressed himself more favorably about Nazi Germany in his book Fünfzig Jahre Deutschland, subjugated himself against his conscience to the censorship of the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, and published the book in Germany. On 8 June 1942 the Nazis increased the pressure on Sven Hedin by deporting Alfred Philippson and his family to the Theresienstadt concentration camp. By doing so they accomplished their goal of forcing Hedin against his conscience to write his book Amerika im Kampf der Kontinente in collaboration with the Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda and other government agencies and to publish it in Germany in 1942. In return, the Nazis classified Alfred Philippson as “A-prominent” and granted his family privileges which enabled them to survive. For a long time Hedin was in correspondence with Alfred Philippson and regularly sent food parcels to him in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. On 29 May 1946 Alfred Philippson wrote to him (translation, abbreviated quotation):
Sven Hedin responded on 19 July 1946 (translation, abbreviated quotation):
The names and fates of the over one hundred deported Jews whom Sven Hedin tried to saved have not yet been researched.
Sven Hedin supported the cause
of the Norwegian author Arnulf Øverland and
for the Oslo professor of philology and university
director Didrik Arup Seip, who were interred
in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He
achieved the release of Didrik Arup Seip, but his
efforts to free Arnulf Øverland were
unsuccessful. Nevertheless, Arnulf Øverland
survived the concentration camp. After the third senate of the highest German military court (Reichskriegsgericht) in Berlin condemned to death for alleged espionage the ten Norwegians Sigurd Jakobsen, Gunnar Hellesen, Helge Børseth, Siegmund Brommeland, Peter Andree Hjelmervik, Siegmund Rasmussen, Gunnar Carlsen, Knud Gjerstad, Christian Oftedahl and Frithiof Lund on 24 February 1941, Sven Hedin successfully appealed via Colonel General Nikolaus von Falkenhorst to Adolf Hitler for their reprieve. Their death penalty was converted on 17 June 1941 by Adolf Hitler to ten years forced labor. The Norwegians Carl W. Mueller, Knud Naerum, Peder Fagerland, Ottar Ryan, Tor Gerrard Rydland, Hans Bernhard Risanger and Arne Sørvag who had been condemned to forced labor under the same charge received reduced sentences at Sven Hedin’s request. Unfortunately, Hans Bernhard Risanger died in prison just a few days before his release. Von
Falkenhorst
was condemned by a British military court on August 2,
1946, to death by firing squad because of his
responsibility for passing on a Führerbefel called
the Commando Order. Sven
Hedin intervened on his behalf, achieving a pardon on
December 4, 1946, with the argument that von
Falkenhorst had likewise striven to pardon the ten
Norwegians condemned to death. Von Falkenhorst's death
penalty was commuted by the British military court to
20 years in prison. In the end, Nikolaus von
Falkenhorst was released early from the Werl war criminals prison on July
13, 1953. Because of his outstanding services, Sven Hedin was raised to the untitled nobility by King Oskar II in 1902, the last time any Swede was to receive a charter of nobility. Oskar II suggested that he prefix the name Hedin with one of the two common predicates of nobility in Sweden, "af" or "von", but Hedin abstained from doing so in his written response to the king. In many noble families in Sweden it was customary to do without the title of nobility. The coat of arms of Sven Hedin, together with those of some two thousand noble families, is to be found on a wall of the Great Hall in Riddarhuset, the assembly house of Swedish nobility in Stockholm’s inner city, Gamla Stan. In 1905 Sven Hedin was admitted to membership in the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and in 1909 to the Royal Swedish Academy of Military Sciences. From 1913 to 1952 he held the sixth of 18 chairs as an elected member of the Swedish Academy. In this position he had a vote in the selection of Nobel Prize winners. He was an honorary member of numerous Swedish and foreign scientific societies and institutions which honored him with some 40 gold medals; 27 of these medals can be viewed in Stockholm in a display case in the Royal Coin Cabinet. He received honorary doctorates from Oxford (1909), Cambridge (1909), Heidelberg (1928), Uppsala (1935), and Munich (1943) universities and from the Handelshochschule Berlin (1931) (all Dr. phil. h.c.), from Breslau University (1915, Dr. jur. h.c.), and from Rostock University (1919, Dr. med. h.c.). Numerous countries presented him with medals. In Sweden he became a Commander 1st Class of the Royal Order of the North Star (KNO1kl) with a brilliant badge and Knight of the Royal Order of Vasa (RVO). In the United Kingdom he was named Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire by King Edward VII. As a foreigner, he was not authorized to use the associated title of Sir, but he could place the designation KCIE after his family name Hedin. Hedin was also a Grand Cross of the Order of the German Eagle. In his honor have been named a glacier, the Sven Hedin Glacier; a lunar crater Hedin ; a species of the flowering plant, Gentiana hedini; the beetles Longitarsus hedini and Coleoptera hedini; a butterfly, Fumea hedini Caradja; a spider, Dictyna hedini; a fossil hoofed animal, Tsaidamotherium hedini; a fossil Therapsid (a “mammal like reptile”) Lystrosaurus hedini; and streets and squares in the cities of various countries (for example, “Hedinsgatan” at Tessinparken in Stockholm). A permanent exhibition of articles found by Sven Hedin on his expeditions is located in the Stockholm Ethnographic Museum. In the Adolf Frederick church can be found the Sven Hedin memorial plaque by Liss Eriksson. The plaque was installed in 1959. On it, a globe with Asia to the fore can be seen, crowned with a camel. It bears the Swedish epitaph:
A survey of the extensive sources for Sven Hedin research shows that it would be difficult at present to come to a fair assessment of the personality and achievements of Sven Hedin. Most of the source material has not yet been subjected to scientific scrutiny. Even the DFG project Sven Hedin und die deutsche Geographie had to restrict itself to a small selection and a random examination of the source material. The
sources
for Sven Hedin research are located in numerous
archives (and include primary literature,
correspondence, newspaper articles, obituaries and
secondary literature).
During his expeditions Sven Hedin saw the focus of his work as being in field research. He recorded routes by plotting many thousands of kilometers of his caravan itinerary with the detail of a high resolution topographical map and supplemented them with innumerable altitude measurements and latitude and longitude data. At the same time he combined his field maps with panoramic drawings. He drafted the first precise maps of areas unresearched until that date: the Pamir mountains, the Taklamakan desert, Tibet, the Silk Road and the Himalayas. He was likely the first European to recognize that the Himalayas were a continuous mountain range. He systematically studied the lakes of inner Asia, made careful climatological observations over many years, and started extensive collections of rocks, plants, animals and antiquities. Underway he prepared watercolor paintings, sketches, drawings and photographs, which he later published in his works. The photographs and maps with the highest quality printing are to be found in the original Swedish publications. Hedin prepared a scientific publication for each of his expeditions. The extent of documentation increased dramatically from expedition to expedition. His research report about the first expedition was published in 1900 as Die geographisch - wissenschaftlichen Ergebnisse meiner Reisen in Zentralasien 1894 – 97 (Supplement 28 to Petermanns Mitteilungen), Gotha 1900. The publication about the second expedition, Scientific Results of a Journey in Central Asia, increased to six text and two atlas volumes. Southern Tibet, the scientific publication on the third expedition, totalled twelve volumes, three of which were atlases. The results of the Sino - Swedish Expedition were published under the title of Reports from the scientific expedition to the north - western provinces of China under leadership of Dr. Sven Hedin. The sino - Swedish expedition. This publication went through 49 editions. This
documentation
was splendidly produced, which made the price so high
that only a few libraries and institutes were able to
purchase it. The immense printing costs had to be
borne for the most part by Sven Hedin himself, as was
also true for the cost of the expeditions. He used the
fees and royalties which he received from his popular
science books and for his lectures for the purpose. Sven Hedin did not himself subject his documentation to scientific evaluation, but rather handed it over to other scientists for the purpose. Since he shared his experiences during his expeditions as popular science and incorporated them in a large number of lectures, travelogues, books for young people and adventure books, he became known to the general public. He soon became famous as one of the most well recognized personalities of his time. D. Henze wrote the following about an exhibition at the Deutsches Museum entitled Sven Hedin, the last explorer:
A scientific assessment of
Sven Hedin’s character and his relationship to
National Socialism was undertaken at Bonn
University by Professor Hans Böhm, Dipl. -
Geogr. Astrid Mehmel and Christoph Sieker M.A. as
part of the DFG Project Sven
Hedin und die deutsche Geographie (Sven
Hedin and German Geography). |