Adelheid Schneller

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Adelheid Schneller (born March 7, 1873 in Innsbruck ; † September 16, 1955 , ibid) was an Austrian historian and writer .

Life

Her father was the high school professor and state school inspector kk Hofrat Christian Schneller , a writer and folklorist. Her mother Maria, née Canestrini, was born in Venice and had seven children with her husband after their marriage in 1863. From 1879 to 1886 Adelheid Schneller attended the pedagogy in Innsbruck. Then she went to the boarding school of the English Miss St. Groce in Rovereto , where she learned the Italian and French languages.

After she had passed the teacher examination at the Innsbruck Pedagogy in 1895 "with great success", in 1902 she passed the matriculation examination at the Innsbruck grammar school "with excellent success". In the same year she enrolled at the Leopold-Franzens University in Innsbruck, the subject of history and its auxiliary sciences. She achieved excellent results in the two philosophical rigors. The title of her dissertation was The Peace of Brussels from 1516 . This peace agreement followed a dispute between the Swiss and France and meant for Emperor Maximilian I the loss of the Duchy of Milan to France and Verona to the Republic of Venice . This work was included as volume 83 in the collection of historical studies , published by Emil Ebering in the publishing house of the same name, Berlin 1910.

The doctorate in the auditorium of the old university took place on December 9, 1907 in the presence of her father. The rector Rudolf von Scala recognized Schneller as the university's first doctoral student.

After completing her studies, Adelheid Schneller turned to writing. Have survived the Ciste the Dindia. Novella from the 3rd century BC Chr and Larthia Viusinei , an Etruscan novella, both published in Der Föhn , a Tyrolean magazine series.

Adelheid Schneller remained unmarried and had no children. She died of a heart attack in the Saggen retirement home and was buried on September 19, 1955 at Innsbruck's Ostfriedhof. Her grave site was abandoned after 10 years and later reassigned.

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