F. O. Oertel

F.O. Oertel in Bagan (1892)

F.O. Oertel (December 9, 1862 – February 22, 1942) was a German-born engineer, architect, and archaeologist. He is best known among Indian art historians and archaeologists for having excavated the archaeological site of Sarnath (India, Uttar Pradesh) in the winter of 1904–1905. It was here that in March 1905 he unearthed the capital of an Ashokan pillar, which was to become the national emblem of India. However, probably because he was mainly involved as a civil engineer and architect in the Public Works Department, his contributions to the fields of art history and archaeology are largely overlooked in the historiography of South Asian art and archaeology.

Life

F.O. Oertel & his wife Margaret H. Lechmere, 25 July 1903

Friedrich [Frederick] Oscar Emanuel Oertel was born 9 December 1862 in Hannover, Germany.[1] He renounced his German citizenship before leaving for India as a young man, and was naturalised British.[2] He married Margaret Haywood Lechmere (1882–1969) on 25 July 1903[3] with whom he had two children. Retiring around 1920, he returned to England and from 1921 added the name of his wife to his own,[4] thus publishing under the name of "F.O. Lechmere-Oertel". He died in New York on 22 February 1942.[5][6]

India:1883-1920

Oertel left Germany for India where he studied at the Thomason College of Civil Engineering (now Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee).[7] From March 1883 to March 1887 he was assistant engineer on railway & building construction for Indian Public Board, being posted to the North-Western Provinces & Oudh[8] before returning in 1887–1888 to England where he studied architecture under Richard Phené Spiers.[9] On his way back to Europe he was nearly killed on 17 April 1887 when the P&O Tasmania (de) which he had boarded and which was sailing from Mumbai (Bombay) to Marseille sunk on the south-western coast of Corsica.[10]

The Lion Capital of Ashoka on the ground at Sarnath, before 1911, probably 1904-05

Oertel then started upon a brilliant career in the Public Works Department, being first sent on diverse missions and then appointed in various locations. Sent by the Government of the North-Western Provinces and Oudh, in the winter of 1891–92 he surveyed the monuments and archaeological sites in North and Central India before reaching Rangoon in March 1892.[11] Then, and in the following month, Oertel visited Mandalay, Amarapura and Sagaing from where he travelled down the Irrawady to Pagan and Prome (today Pyay). Back in Rangoon, he travelled South to Pegu (today Bago), Moulmein (today Mawlamyaing), Martaban (Mottama) and Thaton. On his return, he wrote a lengthy report illustrated with original photos which was published the following year.[12] The photos which he took during this journey also illustrated George W. Bird's book Wanderings in Burma, published a few years later, along with photos by Felice Beato.[13]

In 1900 he was sent to Sri Lanka by the Royal Asiatic Society in order to visit the Abhayagiri dagoba and make suggestions on the best way to preserve or restore it.[14] As Executive Engineer in the "Buildings and Roads" branch of the Public Works Department, North-West Provinces and Oudh,[15] as from 1902, and as Superintending Engineer from 1908,[16] he was posted in various places of Uttar Pradesh  :[17] from 1903 to 1907, he was in Benares, in 1908 he was located in Lucknow, and from 1909 to 1915, in Cawnpore; he was then sent to Shillong, Assam, where he remained up to 1920.[18] Throughout this period he was also involved in supervising or participating in the construction of numerous buildings in Uttar Pradesh (Allahabad; Agra; Lucknow; Cawnpore).[19] This firsthand experience helped him to formulate his opinion concerning the construction of the new capital at New Delhi, which he made public with a lecture delivered before the East India Association at Caxton Hall, Westminster, on 21 July 1913.[20] Here he strongly urged that the architects of New Delhi should be inspired with a "really national Indian style".[21]

He was a member of various associations: the Institution of Civil Engineers (1889),[22] the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1900),[23] and the Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft (1908);[24] he also became Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1888 and Fellow of the same institute in 1901.[25] While posted at Benares, Oertel undertook a number of works, such as the construction of a road leading to Sarnath, construction of a shelter for the sculptures found at Sarnath, transfer of the images kept in the Queen's College to this site, and excavation of the site.[26] Following his excavations, he was transferred to Agra – John Marshall, the then General Director of the Archaeological Survey of India, taking over the Sarnath excavations – where he worked on preservation of the Fort in the years 1905–1906; in the year 1909–1910, he surveyed the Rikhian caves in Uttar Pradesh.[27]

During the Royal Tour of 1905–1906, Oertel guided the Prince and the Princess of Wales (later King George V and Queen Mary) around the fort of Agra on 18 December 1905 and accompanied the Princess on her visit of the Sarnath excavations while the Prince and the Princess were in Benares from 18 to 21 February 1906.[28] In August 1908, he took part to the Fifteenth International Congress of Orientalists in Copenhagen, where he presented his excavations at Sarnath.[29] In 1909, he was still on furlough in Europe where he visited glass factories in England, Germany and Austria, publishing a short monograph on the topic in 1915, where he advocated that this industry should be developed in India.[30] F.O. Oertel then became Chief Engineer and Secretary to the Public Works Department of the Government of Assam and this position provoked debate, considering the fact that Oertel was German by birth and that Germany and England were then at war.[31]

Contribution to Indian art and archaeology

Beside his report on the monuments of Burma published in 1893, Oertel is best known for the excavation of Sarnath carried from December 1904 up to April 1905.[32] Not only did he unearth the Maurya capital on 15 March[33] but he also brought to light numerous major images dating from the 4th up to the 12th century.

Oertel left Sarnath for Agra where another major task awaited him: the restoration of the Diwan-i-Amm and Jahangiri Mahal in the Agra Fort and the reconstruction of the four minarets of the south gateway of the Akbar tomb in Sikandra in 1905–1906 while also working on the compound of the Taj Mahal,[34] all work undertaken under the impetus of Lord Curzon as preparation to the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales. While in Agra he also conducted more detailed study of the Moghol architecture of the city, as can be inferred from the Annual progress report by W.H. Nicholls.

In 1909–1910, Oertel documented the sculptures of Yoginis at Rikhian (Rikhiyan) in Banda, now Chitrakoot district of Uttar Pradesh[35] and also took an interest in the monuments located at Garhwa in the Allahabad district.[36]

After India

F.O. Oertel, September 1930

He apparently returned to the United Kingdom in 1921, having retired from the Public Works Department; till around 1928, he lived in Teddington naming his house "Sarnath",[37] and gave lectures on India.[38] In 1930, i.e. probably before departing for Abyssinia,[39] he donated to the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge numerous artefacts which he had collected as well as a large collection of gelatine photos which he had made while posted in India.[40]

Dr C.W. Martin,[41] minister to the emperor Haile Selassie, whom he must have met in London, invited him to Abyssinia, where he lived from 1930 to 1932.[42] In January 1933 he travelled to India where he spent three months with his daughter, showing her the country where he had lived; the journey concluded with a visit to his brother, Charles (Carl) Hermann Oertel, who was barrister-at-law in Lahore[43] where both Oertel and his daughter stayed one full month before returning to Cyprus, where he apparently settled in July 1933. In the winter of 1935–1936 he travelled to Japan, staying in Nara.[44] He then went to South America, probably visiting his daughter Joan, married to a Dr R.L. Cheverton, whom she had met in Cyprus and who lived in the Falkland Islands.[45] In December 1936 and January 1937, Oertel resided in Malta where a lengthy biographical paper was devoted to him by the Times of Malta in its issue of 16 December. While he was there he also delivered a lecture on Abyssinia at the University.[46]

He went back to England when his son married in 1938, meeting his wife for the last time before going to Portugal, the West Indies and Kingston, Jamaica and New York, where he arrived in June 1940.[47]

Bibliography of Oertel's publications (chronological)

Bibliography

Documentation

References

  1. "Oertel-Jaeger Family Website". Retrieved 24 April 2013. The author of this page is thankful to Rolf Jaeger for having put to her disposal photos and letters from F.O. Oertel.
  2. http://yourdemocracy.newstatesman.com/parliament/war/HAN2250178; http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1916/nov/15/public-works-department#S5CV0087P0_19161115_HOC_9 | Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  3. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=rossbus&id=I36381 (retrieved 24 June 2013). See http://www.jaeger-oberursel.de/6801.html for Margaret Lechmere-Oertel date of death.
  4. As would appear from the "List of members of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland" published in 1921 and the following years.
  5. http://www.ancestry.co.uk/cs/uk/probate.
  6. Confusion about his date of death is noted to this day: the Directory of British architects has him die in 1921 (Directory, vol. 2, pp. 27–28, with further references to 1921 publications), an evident misinterpretation probably caused by his retirement and his return to Europe. The date of 1931 is given without any further reference by Guha 2010, p. 249 (probably in that year he made a major donation to the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge). Mention of his decease, without any precise date being given, is made in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, October 1944, p. 213.
  7. The India List 1905, pp. 579–580.
  8. Directory 2001, p. 27; The India List 1905, p. 580.
  9. Oertel 1913, p. 378.
  10. The Times of Malta 16 December 1936, p. 10.
  11. Oertel 1893, p. (1).
  12. Oertel 1893.
  13. Bird's book is illustrated with photos by F.O. Oertel and Felice Beato. Some 28 photos are by Oertel.
  14. "Some Interesting Experiences", p. 9; Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, July 1905, p. 598. As a result of this survey, Oertel wrote a report (Oertel 1903).
  15. Oertel 1913, p. 378.
  16. The India List 1902, p. 60; his promotion can be deduced from the "List of Members of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great-Britain and Ireland" for 1908.
  17. From what can be inferred from the addresses added to his name in the "List of Members of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great-Britain and Ireland". It is, however, to be noted that these addresses do not necessarily coincide with those given in other sources. For instance, the Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft for 1908 mentions Cawnpore.
  18. Following the references in the India directories for these years, the following locations are found: 1897 Naini Tal, 1898-1899 Saharanpur, 1902-1905 Benares, 1906-1907 Agra, 1908-1909 Lucknow, 1910-1914 Allahabad. According to Margaret's writings Oertel retired in 1918 after which they stayed on in India, but not in Assam. They spent a lot of time trekking in Kashmir. Bodleian: Ms Eng. let. d. 481
  19. Oertel 1913, p. 380.
  20. Oertel 1913.
  21. Oertel 1913, p. 384 also quoted by Metcalf 1989, p. 216 (see pp. 215–217).
  22. Civil Engineer Records: http://home.ancestry.co.uk/ retrieved 29 July 2013. See the "List of Associate Members of the Institution of Civil Engineers", 1904, p. 192.
  23. "Notes of the Quarter" 1901, p.621 where the name of his brother also appears as elected member.
  24. "Personalnachrichten", p. LVI (he was the 1414th member).
  25. Directory 2001, p. 27; The R.I.B.A. Kalendar 1888–89, p. 68.
  26. Oertel 1904–1905, p. 63 ; Oertel 1908, p. 277; Vogel 1910, p. 4.
  27. Guha 2010, p. 249. Rikhian was then located in the Banda district; it is now in the Chitrakoot district.
  28. The Times of Malta 19 December 1936, p. 11; Tour p. xiii. A detailed map of the tour in the Agra fort with written indications by Oertel is preserved in the Cambridge University Library, see http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0115%2FRCMS%2089%2F52%2F1 (last retrieved 15 July 2013). The visit to Sarnath probably took place on 20 February (Tour , p. xxi); a photo depicting the Princess of Wales in front of the Ashoka capital preserved in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle shows her surrounded by some Europeans, one of them – one may reasonably surmise – being Oertel (see http://www.tribuneindia.com/2009/20090426/spectrum/art.htm) (last retrieved 15 June 2013).
  29. "The Fifteenth International", p. 335.
  30. Oertel 1915; see also "India's Glass Trade"; http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1915/may/05/glass-industry-india#S5CV0071P0_19150505_HOC_145 (retrieved 10 July 2013).
  31. http://yourdemocracy.newstatesman.com/parliament/war/HAN2250178¸ http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1916/nov/15/public-works-department#S5CV0087P0_19161115_HOC_9 ; http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1915/jul/01/assam-public-works-department#S5CV0072P0_19150701_HOC_227 (retrieved 10 July 2013).
  32. Oertel 1908, p. 277.
  33. Guha 2010, p. 249.
  34. Nicholls 1906, pp. 17–20. Oertel drew elevations of the Saheli Burj 1 (see Nicholls 1906, plate IV).
  35. Above note 26; for the photos taken during this short survey, see Annual Progress Report…1910, pp. 23–24 (and http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/indiaofficeselect/JointEnqList.asp?txtPlace=Rikhian&strCat=1); on Rikhiyan, read Dehejia 1986, pp. 118–121. Guha 2010, p. 250 mentions the existence of an unpublished paper on the topic.
  36. Vogel 1910, pp. 5–6; Guha 2010, p. 250.
  37. Guha 2010, p. 250.
  38. The slides used in these lectures are preserved in the British Library: http://prodigi.bl.uk/iosm/PhotoShowDescs.asp?CollID=470 (last retrieved 24 June 2013).
  39. He still resided in Teddington in 1930 but no longer appeared in the Phone Book for 1931 (in 1930, his wife was domiciled at another address): see http://home.ancestry.co.uk/ retrieved 29 July 2013.
  40. http://maa.cam.ac.uk/maa/category/collections-2/catalogue/ (retrieved 15 July 2013).
  41. 18.5.1839–8.4.1942, see http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=059-lpj7_2353-5199&cid=1-1-1-158#1-1-1-158 (retrieved 25 June 2013); Oertel wrote a paper on him in the Times of Malta, 27 December 1936.
  42. The Times of Malta 16 December 1936, pp. 9–10.
  43. See http://www.jaeger-oberursel.de/6801.html for a short biography.
  44. The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland gives for address "Nara Hotel, Nara" in 1935 and 1936. This list of travels can also be obtained from the information about Oertel included in the "list of members" published in the successive issues of the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
  45. "Some Interesting Experiences", p. 9; Cheverton in The Times of Malta,20 December 1936, pp. 8–9
  46. Announcement : "Personal experience in Abyssinia", in: Times of Malta, 31 December 1936, p. 11, 3 January 1937, p. 27, 7 January 1937, p. 11. A detailed summary "Lecture on Abyssinia at University" was published in the same newspaper, 8 January 1937, p. 11.
  47. His name is found in the list of passengers of a Pan American flight from Lisbon to New York in June 1940 (http://home.ancestry.co.uk/ retrieved 29 July 2013); he must have travelled to Central America subsequently since his name is found in a list of passengers travelling on the S.S. Quirigua from Kingston to New York in the fall of 1940 (http://home.ancestry.co.uk/ retrieved 29 July 2013).

External links

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