Charlotte Baroness von Hadeln

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Charlotte Freifrau von Hadeln , maiden name Georgine Therese Wanda Charlotte von Natzmer (born October 18, 1884 in Trebendorf , † June 3, 1959 in Essen ) was a German national functionary in women's associations and a writer.

Life

Charlotte von Natzmer was the daughter of the officer and landowner Gneomar Dubislav von Natzmer and his wife Therese, née Ohlendorff. She had a brother. Since 1907 she was married to the officer and farmer Wilhelm von Hadeln (1876–1930). The couple had a daughter and two sons.

After the First World War , she became involved in the district women's committee of the DNVP and was district chairman of the Evangelical Women's Aid in Cottbus from 1921 to 1932 . In 1925 she became the federal state leader of Brandenburg, Queen Luise , a women's association closely related to the paramilitary organization Stahlhelm . From 1932 she was the national leader of this organization as the successor to Marie Netz . Hadeln already sympathized with National Socialism during the Weimar Republic , her sons and her husband were active in the SA and SS respectively . Hadeln headed a group of 31 national conservative women who were received by Benito Mussolini on June 3, 1930 . In the course of the Gleichschaltung , she announced the dissolution of the Federation to Queen Luise in the spring of 1934 and advised the members to join the National Socialist Women's Association or the Federation of German Girls . She became deputy leader of the German Women's Front and was a member of the Advisory Council on Population and Race Policy of the Reich Ministry of the Interior . She was ultimately active in the Nazi women's group.

Fonts

  • German women, German loyalty: 1914-1933; A book of honor d. German woman , Traditions-Verl., 1934 (Hg)
  • In Sonne und Sturm , Hofbuchdruckerei Mitzlaff, Rudolstadt 1935
  • Thoughts and poems , Hofbuchdruckerei Mitzlaff, Rudolstadt 1937

literature

  • Ernst Klee : The dictionary of persons on the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945 . 2nd Edition. Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2007, ISBN 978-3-596-16048-8 .
  • Gudrun Wedel: autobiographies of women: a lexicon . Böhlau Verlag, Cologne 2010, ISBN 978-3-412-20585-0 .
  • Hadeln, Charlotte Freifrau von In: Alfons Labisch / Florian Tennstedt : The way to the "Law on the Unification of the Health Care System" of July 3, 1934. Development lines and moments of the state and municipal health system in Germany , part 2, Academy for Public Health in Düsseldorf 1985, ISSN 0172-2131, p. 424.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Gudrun Wedel: Autobiographies of women: a lexicon , Cologne 2010, p. 303
  2. Birte Förster, The Queen Luise-Mythos. Media history of the "ideal image of German femininity" , v & r unipress, Göttingen 2011 (Cultures of Memory 46), p. 330f
  3. Birte Förster, "Der Königin Luise-Mythos. Media history of the" ideal image of German femininity ", v & r unipress, Göttingen 2011 (Cultures of Memory 46), p. 341
  4. ^ Wolfgang Schieder: Myth Mussolini: Germans in Audience with the Duce , Munich 2013, p. 346
  5. Birte Förster, The Queen Luise Myth. Media history of the "ideal image of German femininity" , v & r unipress, Göttingen 2011 (Cultures of Memory 46), p. 345
  6. ^ Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Third Reich , Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 216