Povl Winning Toussieng

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Born(1892-06-15)15 June 1892
Aalborg, Denmark
Died11 January 1967(1967-01-11) (aged 74)
Copenhagen, Denmark
OccupationDoctor, writer and resistance fighter
LanguageDanish
Povl Winning Toussieng
Born(1892-06-15)15 June 1892
Aalborg, Denmark
Died11 January 1967(1967-01-11) (aged 74)
Copenhagen, Denmark
OccupationDoctor, writer and resistance fighter
LanguageDanish
NationalityDanish
GenreTravelogues

Povl Winning Toussieng (15 June 1892 – 11 January 1967) was a Danish doctor, author and resistance fighter.

Povl Winning Toussieng was son of colonel Heinrich Elfred Theodor Toussieng (1845–1908) and Regina Frederikke Winning (1859–1938). Povl Winning Toussieng attended Rungsted Boarding School in Rungsted, Denmark. He went on to study medicine at the University of Copenhagen. After having graduated in 1917, he became a general practitioner (GP) in Nysted, Denmark. Toussieng married Ingeborg Marie Amalie Hansen, and they had two children: Povl Winning Toussieng Junior (5 September 1918 – 17 November 1997) who became a child psychiatrist in Oklahoma City and Agnete Toussieng (25 June 1921 – 31 May 2006).[1]

Stationing in the Dutch East Indies

Toussieng met Queen Juliana of the Netherlands at the Dutch embassy in Copenhagen, and she encouraged him to go to the Dutch East Indies. Toussieng left Denmark for the Dutch East Indies in 1922 on a three-year contract with the Dutch Government. He was stationed in Borneo from 1922 to 1925, whereafter Toussieng continued working as a GP in the eastern part of Java – in Malang until 1937. While he worked as a GP he also worked as a doctor for the Pasoeroean sugartesting station.

Travelogues

In 1937 Toussieng returned to Denmark, and became a GP in Charlottenlund in 1938.

He wrote two books about his experiences in the jungles of the Dutch East Indies: Mahakam: Den store flod (Mahakam: The big river) and Mahakam, ovenfor Faldene (Mahakam, above the falls). Both books were published in 1941.[2]

Collection of cultural objects

Toussieng was given a large number of masks, swords, spears and cultural objects from his grateful patients in the Dutch East Indies. Toussiengs descendants have donated a large number of these objects to the National Museum of Denmark. One of the objects – a mask – has since been portrayed on a Danish stamp.

Resistance fight

References

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