Traces of colonialism in Bielefeld – Germany
City ToursBarbara Frey/Bielefeld postcolonial, 2024
Bielefeld and colonialism? What role did the city's inhabitants, whose economic prosperity was due to the textile industry, play in colonial expansion and exploitation? As in many other Central European cities, the links to colonialism are not obvious and were not part of the city's historical memory for a long time. Hitherto, only a few traces are visible in the cityscape, such as the monument to the Great Elector on Bielefeld's Sparrenburg, which bears witness to the (pre)colonial trade of the Brandenburg-African Company (BAC).
Most of the traces are to be found in the biographies of emigrants and reports on the colonial activities of the city's citizens as they not only bought products from the colonies and donated to the mission - they were also involved in colonial associations, attended colonial festivals, “ethnographic exhibitions” and lectures on colonial topics, collected non-European objects, planted a colonial oak tree in 1924 and named a street after the colonial criminal and Nazi idol Karl Peters in 1963. Furthermore, the headquarters of the Bethel Mission was located in the city.
Some of these topics, which Bielefeld postkolonial has been discussing since 2007 on tours tracing the city's colonial history, are presented in the following stations.
Contact: bi-postkolonial@welthaus.de
Weblinks: https://www.welthaus.de/
References:
Büschenfeld, Jürgen / Sunderbrink, Bärbel (Hrsg.): Bielefeld und die Welt – Prägungen und Impulse, 2014.
Stationen
The Bismarck Monument
Woermann and the Bielefeld linen trade
The memorial plaque in the church “Süsterkirche”
A Bielefeld captain and plantation owner
The Ethnological Collection
The Colonial Oak
The grave crosses at the Zion Cemetery in Bethel
Lutindi, a station of the Bethel Mission
The Colonial Room
Karl-Peters-Straße