Friedrich Gerhard Rohlfs was born at
Vegesack, later part of Bremen. His father was a physician, and encouraged Rohlfs to join the field of medicine. After the ordinary course at the
gymnasium of
Osnabrück, he entered the Bremen corps in 1848, and took part as a volunteer in the
Schleswig-Holstein campaign, being made an officer after the
battle of Idstedt (July 1850). and was decorated for bravery as Chevalier of the
Legion of Honour. was the first European to cross Africa from
Tripoli across the
Sahara desert via
Lake Chad and along the
Niger River and to present-day Lagos on the
Gulf of Guinea from 1865 to 1867. He was the second European explorer to visit the region of the
Draa River in southern Morocco. For this work he was awarded the Patron's Medal of the
Royal Geographical Society of London in 1868. In 1874 Rohlfs set out from
Dakhla Oasis intending to reach
Kufra. By February the party was about north of
Abu Ballas (Pottery Hill) in the
Western Desert, looking for a way around the dunes. Accompanied by
Karl Zittel and a surveyor called Jordans, Rohlfs and his colleagues experienced a torrential downpour - a rare occurrence in the desert. Rohlfs' team restocked and watered their camels and built a
cairn at the place he named
Regenfeld ("Rain field"). The westward progress of the expedition continued to be hampered by the north–south dune ridges of the
Great Sand Sea which the loaded camels were unable to climb. The party was forced to head northwest along the easier inter-dune corridors and reached Siwa. In 1875, he visited the United States, and lectured on his travels. In 1878 Rohlfs and Anton Stecker (1855-1888) were commissioned by the German African Society to go to
Wadai. They succeeded in reaching the oasis of
Kufra, one of the chief centres of the
Senussites, but being attacked by Arabs, they were obliged to retreat, making their way to the coast at
Benghazi, reaching there in October 1879. In 1880 Rohlfs accompanied Stecker on an exploring expedition to
Abyssinia; but after delivering a letter from the German emperor to the
Negus, he returned to Europe. In 1885, when the rivalry between the British and Germans in East Africa was very keen,
Otto von Bismarck appointed Rohlfs consul at
Zanzibar, which Bismarck desired to secure for Germany. Rohlfs, untrained in diplomacy, was no match for
John Kirk, the British agent, and he was soon recalled. He did not visit Africa again. Rohlfs died at , near
Bonn. ==Bibliography==