Ernst Boerschmann was born in
Priekulė,
Klaipėda Region,
Lithuania, on 18 February 1873. His brother Friedrich Börschmann (1870–1941) was a physician, and his sister Anna Börschmann (1871–1939) was an educator. As a child, Boerschmann attended the Humanistische Gymnasium in
Memel. He entered the
Technische Hochschule in Berlin (today
Technische Universität Berlin) in 1891, majoring in Architecture, where he graduated in 1896. After college, he joined the
Staatsexamen and graduated in 1901 as an Assessor. From 1902 to 1904, he was an Engineer with the East Asian Occupation Brigade (Ostasiatischen Besatzungsbrigade) in China, where he became interested in classical Chinese architecture. In 1906, Boerschmann began his first expedition with the financial support of the
German Empire. He traveled to China as a scientific advisor to the
German Foreign Office, who would continue to support his studies until the outbreak of
World War I in 1914. After the
First World War, Boerschmann was a lecturer on China in
Königsberg (now
Kaliningrad) from 1918 to 1921. He worked initially only in
East Prussia, but was soon extended to the entire empire. Beginning in 1921 he worked in
Berlin as a lecturer at
Technische Hochschule Berlin, where he was named a Professor in 1927. With the publication of three books of his photography of China in the 1920s –
Baukunst und Landschaft (which was translated into French and English),
Picturesque China, and
Chinesische Architktur – Boerschmann became internationally well known, but as a photographer rather than a researcher. in Beijing as a corresponding member. From 1933 to 1937, Boerschmann embarked on his third trip to China. On this trip, he collected many documents, oral history accounts, photographs, building plans, and inscriptions. He returned to Germany in 1940 and became a lecturer at the
University of Berlin on Chinese architecture. In 1943, his apartment was destroyed by
WWII bombings. In 1945, Boerschmann was promoted to Professor of Sinology at the
Humboldt University of Berlin, and later held the same position at
Hamburg University. He died in
Bad Pyrmont,
Hamelin-Pyrmont, Lower Saxony, on 30 April 1949. ==Legacy==