Oskar von Truppel

Oskar Truppel, from 1911 von Truppel (Katzhütte, 17 May 1854 – Berlin-Frohnau, 20 August 1931) was a vice admiral in the Imperial German Navy. He was the governor of the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory from 8 June 1901 to 19 August 1911.

Biography
Truppel was the son of pastor Johann Christian Truppel and Bertha Schwartz. He became an orphan at the age of six. He first attended Gymnasium in Rudolstadt before joining the Imperial German Navy as a cadet on 31 May 1871, where he held a variety of tasks and positions, both on land and at sea, until 1886. He had sailed almost all waters, was both a torpedo division commander and an artillery instructor and had also taught at the Naval Academy. In 1891 he married Anna Müller-Sauvalle in Bremen, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. From 1894 to 1897, Truppel was a department head at the Naval High Command.

His career in the German colony of Kiautschou in Qing China began in December 1897, when Truppel was given command of the SMS Prinzess Wilhelm, which was then operating off Tsingtau. On board the SMS Darmstadt and accompanied by the, he finally landed at Tsingtau at the end of January 1898 and was interim commanding officer there from 11 February to 15 April. At that time he was frigate captain with the rank of lieutenant colonel. After the arrival of the first governor in Tsingtau, Truppel commanded the Prinzess Wilhelm in East Asian waters until 1899. In July 1899 he took over a department in the Naval Office in Berlin, but on 20 February 1901 he was appointed third governor of Kiautschou. Truppel took over the office on 8 June 1901 with the rank of captain at sea. Although this was generally seen as a good decision, it also had to do with luck. The previous governor Paul Jaeschke had died of typhoid fever in January 1901 and was only his provisional successor. Under Truppel, Kiautschou grew into a "". His chief of staff from 1902 to the summer of 1906 was the later vice admiral Felix Funke, then lieutenant captain, later frigate captain. Truppel promoted industry and the construction of new buildings (including the government building and the police station). In addition, new living space had to be created quickly for the Chinese attracted by the flourishing city of Tsingtau. Truppel was promoted to rear admiral in 1905 and lived in his residence, which was completed in the same year and is now a tourist attraction. In 1907 he was promoted to vice admiral.

Truppel's head of administration in the Naval Office, Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, wrote the following about Truppel's character and his administration in China in 1907: "Promotes the development of the protected area. Energetic in all investigations of a political and economic nature, he sometimes forgets the necessary consideration of the financial situation and financial regulations of the empire (...). Vice Admiral Truppel is not free from vanity."

In 1911, Truppel unexpectedly resigned from his post at his own request, and just a few months after his appointment as admiral, he and his family embarked on the SMS Gneisenau. After his return to Germany, Truppel was raised to hereditary nobility by German Emperor Wilhelm II on 19 August 1911 and at the same time transferred to the reserve.

He initially taught again at the Naval Academy, but moved with his family a short time later  to Berlin and died there in 1931.