Johannes Ittmann
Johannes Ittmann (26 January 1885 – 15 June 1963) was a German Protestant missionary in Cameroon between 1911 and 1940.
He was born in Groß-Umstadt, Grand Duchy of Hesse, German Empire and died in Gambach, Hesse, West Germany.[1] He worked with the Basel Mission[2] in Cameroon from 1911 to 1940.[1] He joined the National Socialist German Workers’ Party in 1934; this membership led to his forced retirement by the Basil Mission, who disagreed with their politics.[3]
He did extensive ethnological and anthropological work in the Southwest Province, an English-speaking part of Cameroon, and published some 1,000 pages about it.[4][5] His best-known work is his dictionary about the Duala language.
Publications
- Grammatik des Duala, Kamerun (Grammar of Duala, with Carl Meinhof) (1939)[6]
- Sprichwörter der Kundu: (Kamerun): 75 (Veröffentlichung / Deutsche Akademie Der Wissenschaften, Institut Für Orientforschung) (Proverbs of the Kundu)
Family
Ittmann married Hanny Weygandt on August 4, 1914.[7]
References
External links
Template:Protestant missions to Africa Template:Authority control
Template:Germany-reli-bio-stub
- ↑ a b Brill website, Ittmann, Johannes
- ↑ University of Southern Carolina, Digital Library section, Ittmann, Johannes
- ↑ Wurttembergische Kirchengeschichte website, Basler Mission Deutscher Zweig, article dated May 16, 2019
- ↑ "Ittmann%2C%20Johannes." Stanford University website, Library section, Ittmann, Johannes
- ↑ World Cat website, Esquisse de la Langue de L’association culterelle des nymphes au bord du Mon-Cameroun
- ↑ Amazon Books, Johannes Ittmann, retrieved 2024-03-05
- ↑ Johannes Ittmann website, Johannes Ittmann