Claudia Gudelius

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Claudia Gudelius, 2005

Claudia Gudelius , b. Höhne (born November 13, 1951 in Bad Tölz ) is a German writer .

Life

Claudia Gudelius grew up in Jachenau in the Bad Tölz district . Her parents were the former major general Otto Höhne and his wife Hildegard Rosa Josefa, nee. Klügel (1913–1985). In 1971 she graduated from high school in St. Ursula Hohenburg in Lenggries .

From 1972 she studied medicine at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich and graduated in 1974 from the Physikum . In addition, she studied Aztec language . After obtaining her license to practice medicine , she received her doctorate in 1979 .

She then worked as a doctor in the Air Force . After a long break, she practiced freelance at several clinics, including the Garmisch-Partenkirchen Clinic and the Bad Tölzer Buchberg Clinic. When Jachenau was cut off from the outside world at the beginning of 2019, she and two doctors from the BRK formed an emergency team to provide medical care for the place. She does volunteer work as an asylum worker.

As a writer, she wrote historical novels .

Claudia Gudelius has been married to Jost Gudelius (* 1942) since 1975. She has four children and lives in Jachenau.

Act

In her novels Gudelius takes up historical events, places and circumstances which she z. T. traveled and what she researched in archives. “ A wonderful book ” is the story of the young Gonzalos, who came to Indios in the 16th century and experienced the discriminatory difficulties of the ethnic group. In her latest novel, Die alten Schuld , she chose the witch trials in the county of Werdenfels as the basis for the story.

Since 2012, two of her books have been published by the Schneemann Verlag, which her husband founded.

Works

literature

  • CV up to 1974 described in: Contributions to the knowledge of Indian medicine in North America. Dissertation. University of Munich 1980.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Petra Schneider: The power of fear. Süddeutsche Zeitung, October 5, 2017, accessed on August 19, 2020 .
  2. Caught on fire. October 6, 2017, accessed August 19, 2020 .
  3. Jachenau in a state of emergency. January 8, 2019, accessed August 19, 2020 .
  4. Rescue angel in deep snow: They help the Jachenauer in a medical emergency. January 11, 2019, accessed August 19, 2020 .
  5. FOCUS Online: Cut off from the outside world: Jachenau proves how to solve crises. Retrieved August 19, 2020 .
  6. Book culture . Book Culture Association, 1999, ISBN 978-3-88710-211-1 , p. 46 ( google.de [accessed on August 19, 2020]).