Adele Osterloh

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Adele Minna Osterloh (born January 2, 1857 in Dresden ; † January 3, 1946 there ) was a German poet .

Life

Adele was the daughter of the Dresden banker Franz Günther. After a boarding school in Geneva and a trip to Italy , she married the gynecologist Paul Osterloh (1849–1918), wrote novels and short stories, and from 1905 she was deputy chairwoman of the Literary Society. V. Dresden . She lived in Dresden on Wiener Strasse 8. In 1900, Osterloh wrote the play “The fairy tale of happiness” in four acts. Georg Pittrich (* 1870; † 1934) composed the music for the plot . The author's husband, Paul Osterloh, was an extraordinary member of the Tonkünstler Association in Dresden , while the composer and conductor Pittrich was a full association member there.

After the death of her husband, the doctor's widow moved to Elisenstrasse 4 in Dresden around 1920.

Adele Osterloh translated Anna Maria von Schürmann's dissertation “May a Christian woman study?” From Latin.

Daughters

The writer had three daughters: Edith, Paula and Ada (Adele). Her eldest daughter Edith (1878–1922), married Benn, married the doctor, poet and essayist Gottfried Benn 14 years after the accidental death of her first husband, Friedrich Brosin († 1900) and working as a theater actress . The journalist Nele Benn was her granddaughter. The middle daughter Paula (1882–1968) married Carl Julius Stübel (1877–1974) with a doctorate in law in 1906 and participated in exhibitions at the Berlin Secession as an artist under the name Stübel-Osterloh . The youngest daughter Ada (Adele) lived temporarily with her two sisters in the garden city of Hellerau . Her husband had been Georg Alfred Stübel (1880–1915), who had a doctorate in law, since 1910. He died in Lorraine on June 20, 1915 during the First World War . A plaque on the Johannisfriedhof in Dresden commemorates him. After starting her studies at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Dresden in 1916, Ada Stübel switched to human medicine at the universities in Freiburg, Leipzig and Jena. Here she passed the medical state examination in 1920 and was at the Thuringian State University in 1921 with an examination on the subject of varices and pregnancy . PhD. Ada Stübel had obtained her research results in the evaluation of 48 cases of varicose veins in the Surgical University Clinic under Director Professor Nicolai Guleke (1878–1958). When she submitted her doctoral thesis, A. Stübel had been employed as an assistant doctor at the Jena "Physiological Institute" since May 1921. She took care of her seven-year-old niece Nele Benn, especially when Edith Benn, née Osterloh, widowed Brosin, was operated on in November 1922 by Professor Georg Magnus (1883–1942), the senior physician at the Jena University Surgical Clinic , for a gall disease. Edith Benn died after the operation. In the second half of the 1920s, A. Stübel moved to Mainz and worked there as an ophthalmologist and in between in Lichtenberg / Odenwald due to the war . In the 1960s, her nephew, Christian Stübel (1906–1983), a doctor of law, the son of her sister Paula and the grandson of Adele Osterloh, also lived in Mainz.

brother in law

A brother-in-law of the poet, a brother of her husband Paul, was Gustav Eduard Osterloh (1842–1903), major general at disposition since 1902 and previously lieutenant colonel in the 2nd Field Artillery Regiment No. 28 from 1890. He lived with his wife Therese and their daughter Hildegard in Leipzig, the birthplace of Adele Osterloh's husband.

Resting place Johannisfriedhof

The poet's funeral took place on January 10, 1946 in the Johannisfriedhof (Dresden) .

Works

  • The end (Dresden 1896)
  • The other. Comedy (Dresden 1888)
  • The blonde adjutant. No soldiers' stories (Dresden 1883)
  • Senior teacher Gesenius (Stuttgart 1896)
  • Among comrades (Dresden 1893)
  • The sins of the fathers (Berlin 1898)
  • The fairy tale of luck (play), around 1900.
  • Libretto for the operetta The Mouth of Truth (Bocca della Verità) , Dresden 1899
  • Self-confessions. In: German Roman Library 23 (1895)
  • A woman who has neglected her duty , Dresden [1919]

Her literary work also includes plays that went unprinted. An unpublished manuscript by Adele Osterloh with the title Meine Töchter is in the literary archive of the Hildesheim University Library .

literature

  • Adele Osterloh . In: Sophie Pataky (Hrsg.): Lexicon of German women of the pen . Volume 2. Verlag Carl Pataky, Berlin 1898, p. 107 f. ( Digitized version ).
  • Gudrun Wedel: autobiographies of women. A lexicon. Cologne, Weimar, Vienna 2010, p. 629.
  • A graphic representation of the writer Adele Osterloh by G. DREHER with her signature as a single-sheet print is in the possession of the Berlin State Library , an institution of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Day of burial: January 10, 1946; Library Service Center Baden-Württemberg
  2. ^ Sarfert, Hans-Jürgen: Hellerau. The garden city and artist colony . Dresden 1992, p. 81; ISBN 3-910184-05-7
  3. ^ Register of associations in the address book for Dresden; Volume 1906, Part V, p. 77 Column 3 - Digitalisat SLUB Dresden
  4. ^ Address book 1918 for Dresden and suburbs, III. Part p. 659 column 4; House book
  5. Published by E. Pierson's Verlag , Dresden and Leipzig 1900; Reprint, 2001 Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 0-543-77124-5
  6. ^ Report on the Tonkünstler-Verein zu Dresden 898/99 , p. 53 No. 259; Digitized SLUB Dresden
  7. ^ Report on the Tonkünstler-Verein zu Dresden 1898/99 , p. 43 No. 167; Digitized SLUB
  8. ^ Address book of the state capital Dresden Volume 1942, part II, p. 623 column 2; Digitized SLUB Dresden
  9. Amica dissertatio inter Annam Mariam Schurmanniam et Andr. Rivetum de capacitate ingenii muliebris ad scientias , Paris 1638, German under the title May a Christian woman study? by Adele Osterloh
  10. ^ Portrait in side profile, taken before 1900 by Hugo Erfurth Dresden; printed in: Benn his life in pictures and texts , p. 73; ISBN 978-3-608-95345-9
  11. Soerensen, Nele Poul: My father Gottfried Benn . Frankfurt / M .; Berlin 1993, p. 15; ISBN 3-548-30317-X
  12. Pankotsch, Hans: How did Fritz Brosin die - a search for clues !? In: "From the Saxon mountaineering history", Issue 17 (2011), pp. (19-21) 20
  13. ^ Artists in the Berlin Secession; Stübel-Osterloh, Paula, No. 84 in the list of the Art History Institute of the Christian Albrechts University in Kiel
  14. Auf dem Sand 10 according to the address book for Dresden and its suburbs, volume 1918; VI. Part, p. 475, column 2; Digital copy of the SLUB Dresden
  15. Kgl. Saxon. Captain dR Dr.jur Georg Alfred Sübel; In the First World War memorial project - sorted alphabetically,
  16. ^ Dissertation with résumé of Ada Stübel, published by Verlag Urban & Schwarzenberg, Berlin 1921
  17. Jena residents' register 1923; P. 119 Column 2 - Digitized THULB
  18. Becker, Gunnar: Gottfried Benn Genie und Barbar. Biography , fifth chapter, section “Death in Jena”, Berlin 2006, pp. 130f .; ISBN 978-3-351-02632-5
  19. ^ Ophthalmologists in Mainz: Stübel, Dr. A. Fuststraße 9. In: Mainzer Adressbuch 1940 , Verlag J. Diemer Mainz p. 753 column 1
  20. ^ Catalog of the German National Library, place of activity until 1947
  21. ^ Address book for the city district of Mainz, 66th edition, Verlag Diemer, Mainz, November 1962, page 326
  22. Inscription on the tombstone in Leipzig; SLUB / Deutsche Fotothek / Straube, Stefan
  23. Confirmation by the administration of the Elias-, Trinitatis- and Johannisfriedhofes Dresden dated January 10, 2019
  24. ^ Verlag von Heinrich Minden, Dresden and Leipzig, framed advertisement [p. 120], printed by E. Pierson's Verlag (R. Licke) in Dresden; Reprint in Poland, 2006 Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 0-543-77936-X
  25. ↑ Play in four acts, E. Pierson's Verlag, Dresden and Leipzig 1900; Reprint, 2001 Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 0-543-77124-5
  26. ^ Operetta in three acts by Heinrich Platzbecker , text by Adele Osterloh and the composer; Text of the chants: Lehmannsche Buchdruckerei, Graphische Kunstanstalt, Dresden 1899; Digitized: Library of Congress
  27. ^ Berthold Sturm's Verlag Dresden, published under the pseudonym Dora Helfft . DNB 362446377
  28. ^ Müller, Reinhard: "Osterloh (née Günther), Adele (Minna)". In: German Literature Lexicon. Berlin / Munich, p. 751; ISBN 3-317-01646-9
  29. Reported by Pankotsch, Hans in: How died Fritz Brosin - a search for clues !? In: “From the Saxon Mountaineering History”, Issue 17 (2011), pp. (19-21) 21: Estate of Hans Egon Holthusen , p. 16