Bruno Pao
Estonian maritime historian, writer and politician (1931–2025)
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Bruno Pao (22 August 1931 – 28 February 2025) was an Estonian maritime historian, writer and municipal politician.[1][2] He worked in senior posts at the Estonian Maritime Museum, helped organise Estonia's first maritime-archaeology expeditions, and later became a prominent figure in the preservation and popularisation of maritime culture in Saaremaa.[3][4]
Bruno Pao | |
|---|---|
Pao in Kuivastu, 2013 | |
| Born | 22 August 1931 |
| Died | 28 February 2025 (aged 93) Kuressaare, Estonia |
| Citizenship | Estonian |
| Alma mater | University of Tartu |
| Occupations | Maritime historian, writer, municipal politician |
| Awards | Order of the White Star, 5th Class |
Early life and education
Pao was born at Emmaste on Hiiumaa.[1][2] He originally intended to pursue a maritime career and entered Estonian Maritime Academy in 1947 to train as a ship mechanic, but did not complete the course for health reasons.[2] He later studied history by correspondence at the University of Tartu, graduating in 1983.[2] His diploma thesis dealt with Estonian peasant participation in nineteenth-century merchant sailing.[2]
Career
From 1977 to 1985 Pao was head of the Maritime Department of the Estonian Maritime Museum, and from 1985 to 1987 he served as the museum's scientific director.[2] In a later scholarly overview of underwater heritage in Estonia, Maili Roio identified the 1978 Neckmansgrund expedition, led by Pao for the museum, as the country's first underwater archaeological maritime expedition.[3] Roio also wrote that the expedition was unprecedented in Soviet Estonia and helped demonstrate that such investigations could be carried out in Estonian waters.[3] Pao continued to direct maritime expeditions until 1986.[3][2]
Pao's research focused on maritime history and on the local and cultural history of Estonia's islands.[2][4] He was part of the initiative group for Mereleksikon, a major Estonian maritime reference work, and contributed articles to it.[2][5] He was also involved in the museum's underwater archaeology club Viikar, which the museum has described as an important vehicle for maritime-archaeological work in Estonia during the 1980s.[6]
From 1989 to 1994 Pao worked as a development adviser in Muhu Parish.[2] In a 2015 retrospective by Eesti Rahvusringhääling (ERR), he recalled that Muhu had to prepare its municipal statutes and development plan in order to regain self-governing status in 1990.[7] He was one of the founders of the Saaremaa Merekultuuri Selts in 1994 and chaired the organisation from 1994 to 2006.[2][4] He also served on the council of Saaremaa Museum and became active in local politics in Kuressaare, serving as vice-chairman of the city council from 2002 to 2005 and as chairman of its ethics committee from 2005 to 2009.[2][4]
Pao published widely on maritime and local history. In a review of the collective volume Eesti merenduse ajalugu I (History of Estonian Maritime Affairs I), Ott Laanemets placed him among the small senior generation of writers who had long sustained Estonian maritime historiography outside the mainstream of Estonian historical scholarship.[8] In 2023 he contributed to the same volume, including sections on the early modern period and on the development of Estonian shipping from the mid-nineteenth century to the First World War.[9] In 2019 ERR described Ei hõbedat, ei kulda as his eighth book, a collection of his earlier articles and historical narratives.[10] He also wrote the screenplays for the documentaries Meri ukse all (1980) and Meremeeste maa (1982).[11]
Honours
Pao received the Order of the White Star, 5th Class, in 2003.[12] He later received the Kuressaare City Decoration in 2011 and the Saare County coat-of-arms in 2016.[13]