Hanna of Pestalozza

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Hanna Countess von Pestalozza (actually Brunhilde Countess von Schlippenbach ; * December 23, 1877 in Kissingen ; † July 15, 1963 in Groß Glienicke ) was a German writer . She published under her maiden name.

Life

Pestalozza obtained his doctorate in 1921 with a historical review of gender co-education in Germany. She stood up for the self-determination of women , then also called selfhood . Her textbook story tales had many editions.

From 1930 to 1935 she received financial support from the German Schiller Foundation. In February 1936 she signed an appeal on church politics by theologians August Schowalter and Georg Stuhlfauth to " renew and expand the Protestant Church as a people's church and enable the warring parties to come to an agreement."

After the end of the war, her work I Will Serve (1935) was placed on the list of literature to be segregated in the Soviet occupation zone .

A primary school is named after her in Groß Glienicke.

Fonts

  • Your soul . In: Kaufhaus N. Israel , Berlin: Album 1913. The woman in the century of energy. (Elsner) Berlin 1912.
  • The limits of education. Beyer & Sons, Langensalza 1919
  • Doctoral thesis: The dispute over co-education over the past 30 years in Germany . Beyer & Mann, Langensalza 1921
  • Upbringing and career choice . Langensalza. Beyer. 1921
  • with Theodor Steudel : stories for the lower school. Teubner Verlag, Leipzig / Berlin 1926 (Volume 1 of Teubner's historical teaching work. )
  • Augustin and Monika: The story of mother and son. Novella of cultural history . Darmstadt. E. Hofmann. 1930
  • Itself is - the woman . In: Berliner Tageblatt (Sunday edition), February 5, 1933, p. 16
  • I want to serve. A woman experiences and confesses German fate . Runge, Berlin-Neutempelhof 1935
  • Old Mother. Letters. Berlin 1938

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matthias Wolfes: Protestant theology and modern world: studies. Dissertation. Walter de Gruyter, Heidelberg 1999.
  2. polunbi.de