Robert von Heine-Geldern explained

Robert Freiherr von Heine-Geldern (16 July 1885 - 25 May 1968), known after 1919 as Robert Heine-Geldern, was an Austrian anthropologist, ethnologist, archaeologist and prehistorian who studied in particular the cultures and civilisations of Southeast Asia. He taught as a professor of ethnology and archaeology of India and Southeast Asia at the University of Vienna and, during his emigration from 1938 to 1949, in the United States. Heine-Geldern is considered a pioneer in the field of Southeast Asian Studies.

Biography

Heine-Geldern was a grandson of the journalist and author Gustav Heine von Geldern who had been elevated to the hereditary rank of Freiherr (baron) by the Austrian emperor (all noble ranks and titles were abolished in Austria in 1919). The German poet Heinrich Heine was his great-uncle. Robert von Heine Geldern was born in Grub (Wienerwald) and attended school in Vienna which was then the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After his Matura diploma in 1903, he studied philosophy and art history at the University of Munich first, then transferred to the University of Vienna. In 1910 he traveled to the India–Burma border region to study local cultures. Upon his return to Vienna, he switched to ethnology (under Father Wilhelm Schmidt), anthropology and prehistory, completing his doctoral thesis in 1914 on The Mountain Tribes of Northern and Northeastern Burma.

Heine-Geldern performed military service during World War I, then worked at the ethnographic department of the Natural History Museum in Vienna (which later became the Museum of Ethnology) from 1917 to 1927. His research combined ethnological, pre-historical and archaeological concepts, and in 1923 pioneered the field of Southeast Asian anthropology with his chapter "Sϋdostasien" in G. Buschan's Illustrierte Völkerkunde. In 1925 he completed his habilitation thesis and was awarded the venia legendi (licence to teach at universities) in the field of "ethnology with special consideration of Southeast Asia and India". He began teaching at the University of Vienna in 1927, where he was appointed associate professor for Ethnology and Archaeology of India, Southeast Asia and Oceania in 1931.

After the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany in March 1938, his licence to teach was revoked for antisemitic motives. Therefore, he did not return from a lecture tour to the United States on which he had embarked two months earlier. Through World War II, he lived as a refugee in New York City, where he worked at the anthropological department of the American Museum of Natural History and lectured at New York University and Columbia University. Heine-Geldern was active in anti-fascist Austrian emigrants' organisations, creating the Austrian-American League together with Irene Harand in 1939 and later joining the Free Austrian Movement. Together with Margaret Mead, Ralph Linton, Adriaan J. Barnouw and Claire Holt he founded the East Indies Institute of America in 1941 which later became the Southeast Asia Institute. In 1943 Heine-Geldern was appointed professor at the Asia Institute in New York.

He returned to Vienna in 1949 where he was reinstated as associate professor of Asian prehistory, art history and ethnology a year later. Heine-Geldern was instrumental in rebuilding the Vienna University's Institute of Ethnology, but was only awarded a full professorship in 1955, three years before his retirement. As Emeritus he continued to work at the institute until his death in Vienna in 1968.

Heine-Geldern was active in starting Southeast Asian studies as an academic field, and his essay on "Conceptions of State and Kingship in Southeast Asia," (1942) is now classic. He was awarded a medal by the Viking Fund, and was a member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Royal Asiatic Society, Royal Anthropological Institute, and the École française d'Extrême-Orient.

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