Fritz Mühlenweg was a German painter and author. His most famous book is In geheimer Mission durch die Wüste Gobi, published in 1950. It was later shortened and translated into English under the title Big Tiger and Christian.
Early life
Fritz Mühlenweg was born in 1898 as a son of a chemist in Konstanz. He was educated as a chemist in Bielefeld and took over the family business after his father died. He left Konstanz in 1926 for Berlin. There, Mühlenweg began to work as an accountant for Deutsche Luft Hansa, a newly formed airline company.
In 1927, Luft Hansa contributed to the Sino-Swedish expedition to Central and South Asia, following plans for an airline connection between Berlin and Beijing. With Sven Hedin as their guide, the expedition would check out meteorological conditions. Mühlenweg joined to expedition as the financial and materials manager from 1927 to 1928. He returned for a second trip to Central Asia in the winter of 1929-1930. In 1931, Mühlenweg took his last and longest trip to the area, to observe weather conditions with a German meteorologist in the Gobi Desert.
Career in art
In 1932, Mühlenweg joined the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and studied painting, but soon dropped out. In Vienna he met his future spouse, Elisabeth Kopriva. In 1934, after their wedding, the couple moved to Allensbach, where both worked as independent artists. During World War II, Mühlenweg was drafted as a customs officer guarding the Swiss border. The Mühlenwegs had seven children. He started publishing literary works in 1946. His greatest success, In geheimer Mission durch die Wüste Gobi, was published in 1950 as the two parts Großer-Tiger und Kompaß-Berg and Null Uhr fünf in Urumtschi. The juvenile adventure novel was set in China and Mongolia, and was based on the experiences Mühlenweg collected during his expeditions. Mühlenweg died in Allensbach in 1961 from the effects of a stroke. His wife survived him less than two days.
Works
In geheimer Mission durch die Wüste Gobi, Freiburg
* Teil 1. Großer-Tiger und Kompaß-Berg, 1950
* Teil 2. Null Uhr fünf in Urumtschi, 1950
Das Tal ohne Wiederkehr oder Die Reise von Magog nach Gog, Freiburg 1952
Kleine mongolische Heimlichkeiten, Bottinghofen am Bodensee 1992
Fremde auf dem Pfad der Nachdenklichkeit, Lengwil am Bodensee 1992
In geheimer Mission durch die Wüste Gobi, Lengwil am Bodensee 1993
Malerei, Lengwil 1999
Mongolische Heimlichkeiten, Lengwil 2002
Drei Mal Mongolei: Dampignak und andere Erzählungen ; Reisetagebücher und Briefe aus der Sven-Hedin-Expedition durch die Innere Mongolei, Hrsg. Ekkehard Faude und Regina Mühlenweg, Lengwil 2006