Childhood, youth, and life as a businessman
Heinrich Schliemann was born into a very large family in
Germany, in
Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1822. His father was a poor
Protestant minister named Ernst Schliemann. Heinrich's mother,
Luise Therese Sophie, died in 1831, when he was just 9.
After her death, Heinrich was sent to live with his uncle. He was enrolled in the
Gymnasium (grammar school) at
Neustrelitz at age 11 with his attendance paid for by his father. He attended the grammar school for at least a year.
Later he claimed that his interest in history had been encouraged by his father, who, he said, had schooled him in the tales of the
Iliad and the
Odyssey and had given him a copy of Ludwig Jerrer's
Illustrated History of the World for Christmas in 1829. Schliemann also later claimed that at the age of 8 he had declared he would one day excavate the city of
Troy.
Interest in and connection with the classics continued during his time at the Gymnasium, so it is likely that he would have been further exposed to Homer. It may be that he had just enough of a classical education to endow him with a yearning for it; he was transferred to the vocational school, or
Realschule, after his father was accused of embezzling church funds, and had to quit the vocational school in 1836 when his father was no longer able to pay for it. According to his diary, his interest in ancient Greece was conceived when he overheard a drunken university student reciting the Odyssey of Homer in classical Greek and Heinrich was taken by the language's beauty. However, the accuracy of that information remains questionable, as do many details in his diary, given that he was demonstrably not always scrupulous about providing the whole truth (he forged documents to divorce his wife and lied in his application for US citizenship). He is also accused of being a black market trader, though several documentaries from the late 80's early 90s prefer to gloss over this accusation.
Schliemann's early academic experiences established the fundamental character of his later life. He wanted to return to the educated life, to reacquire all the things of which he was deprived in childhood. Yet in his archaeological career, there was always a division between him and the educated professionals. Heinrich developed a tendency to pose as something he was not. Moreover, his father's experiences gave him a sympathy to means that were not always legal or aboveboard.
After leaving Realschule, at age 14, Heinrich became a grocer's apprentice at Herr Holtz's grocery in
Fürstenberg. He labored in the grocery for five years, reading voraciously whenever he had a spare moment. In 1841 Schliemann fled to
Hamburg and became a cabin boy on the
Dorothea, a steamer bound for
Venezuela. After twelve days at sea the ship foundered in a gale, and the survivors washed up on the shores of the
Netherlands.
On
March 1, 1844, he took a position with B. H. Schröder & Co., an import/export firm. There he evidenced such judgement and talent for the work that they sent him as a
General Agent in 1846 to
St. Petersburg, where the markets were favorable. He represented a number of companies. He prospered there, but how well is not known; in view of his later experiences with his first wife, he probably did not become rich. He did learn Russian and Greek, employing a system that he used his entire life to learn languages -- Schliemann wrote his diary in the language of whatever country he happened to be in.
Schliemann had a gift for languages, and by the end of his life he was conversant in
English, French, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish, Italian, Greek, Latin, Russian, Arabic, and
Turkish as well as his native
German. Schliemann's ability with languages was an important part of his career as a businessman in the importing trade. How well he actually knew those languages is another question, but he seemed reasonably at home in many nations.
In 1850 Heinrich learned of the death of his brother, Ludwig, who had become wealthy as a speculator in the California gold fields. Taking the cue, Schliemann went to California in early 1851 and started a bank in
Sacramento. The bank bought and resold over a million dollars in gold dust in just six months. The prospectors could mine or pan for the gold, but they had no way to sell it except to middlemen such as Schliemann, who made quick fortunes on it.
Later Heinrich claimed to have acquired
United States citizenship when California was made a state. According to his memoirs, before arriving in California he had dined in Washington with President
Millard Filmore and family. He also published an account of the San Francisco fire of 1851.
He was not in the United States long. On
April 7, 1852, he sold his business rather suddenly (due to fever, he said) and returned to Russia. There he attempted to live the life of a gentleman, which brought him into contact with Ekaterina Lyschin, the niece of one of his wealthy friends. Previously he had learned that his childhood sweetheart, Minna, had married. He was now 30.
Heinrich and Ekaterina were married on
October 12, 1852. The marriage was troubled from the start. Ekaterina wanted him to be richer than he was and withheld conjugal rights until he made a move in that direction, which he did. The canny Schliemann cornered the market in indigo and then went into the indigo business, turning a good profit. This move won him Ekaterina's intimacy and they had a son, Sergey. Two other children followed.
Having a family to support moved Schliemann to tend to business even though he still had his first fortune. He found a way to make yet another quick fortune as a military contractor in the
Crimean War, 1854-1856. He cornered the market in saltpeter, brimstone, and lead, constituents of ammunition, which he resold to the Russian government.
By 1858, Schliemann was wealthy. The poor minister's son had overcome poverty in his own life. He no longer considered himself a professional businessman and was no longer interested in speculation.
Some say he retired at 36, which would have been in 1858; others say 1863, at age 41. In his memoirs he claimed that he wished to dedicate himself to the pursuit of Troy, but this claim, along with many others, is unlikely to be true.