Goetz was born in
Karlsruhe,
Germany, on 17 July 1898, and was educated at the Real-
gymnasium in
Munich. He served in the
Germany military during the
World War I. Early in his career, during the World War I, Goetz was mainly interested in the
Ottoman Turks. Later, he became interested in
Iran (Persia), and subsequently, in the
Persianate Mughal Empire of India. His work on the Indian art history started with the studies of the
Mughal miniature painting. The map collection of the
Berlin State Library included the "Jahangir album", a collection of Mughal-era paintings. Goetz studied this collection in detail, using his knowledge of figurative art,
ethnography, and history. In the 1920s, Goetz obtained a
doctorate from the
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The title of his thesis was
Kostüm und Mode an den indischen Fürstenhöfen in der Grossmoghul-Zeit ("Costume and fashion at the Indian princely courts in the Great Mughal period"). He then joined the
Ethnological Museum of Berlin as an assistant
curator. In 1931, when the German
Weimar Republic was declining amid the
Great Depression, Goetz migrated to the
Netherlands. There, he became the assistant secretary of
Leiden University's Kern Institute for Archaeology and Indian History, and the editor of
Annual Bibliography of Indian Archaeology. His superior
Jean Philippe Vogel, a reputed
Indologist, became his mentor and Goetz started pursuing India-related research. At that time, there was a flood of foreign refugees in the Netherlands, and consequently, certain restrictions had been imposed on the employment of foreigners. As a result, Goetz was unable to take up a permanent position at the Leiden University. Under these circumstances, he decided to accept a grant to work in
British India. ==In India==