Background
Oppert was born into a wealthy banker family in Hamburg.
explorer non-fiction writer Orientalist
Oppert was born into a wealthy banker family in Hamburg.
When that company went bankrupt in 1867, he became interested in trading with of Korea, which at that time followed a strict isolationist policy and was a hermit kingdom, and a closed market to westerners. Oppert visited the country clandestinely several times. Although Oppert himself had no experience in learning the Korean language he judged the Korean language to be much harder to learn than either Chinese or Japanese.
Oppert based this judgment on a scarcity of sources and in his opinion,
The difficulties in acquiring and properly speaking the Corean language are by no means inferior to those which beset the study of the Chinese.
They are even considered by many to be infinitely greater, and they cannot be likened to the comparatively easy manner with which even foreigners are able to acquire a knowledge of Japanese in a proportionately short time. Supplied by an American, East. F. B. Jenkins, with money and arms, they set out on April 30, 1867.
That stone was thought to be steel, but it was in fact quicklime. On their way back, they were engaged by Korean soldiers in a battle and their party had to flee the country.
The incident enraged the Koreans, who were now even less inclined to trade with the foreigners.
Oppert returned to Germany, where he henceforth lived an unremarkable businessman"s life. Some sources claim that he spent a few months in jail for this grave robbing episode. In 1880 he published a book about of Korea titled Ein verschlossenes Land.
Reisen nach Corea.
lieutenant was originally published by Brockhaus in Leipzig and was also translated into English.
According to A. H. South. Landor, the tale of Oppert"s unsuccessful tomb raiding was still well known in of Korea around the end of the 19th century and was being told to foreigners on arriving, with one member of the raid party allegedly still living in Chemulpo.