Eva Seeber

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Eva Seeber , b. Greuner (born August 21, 1932 in Leipzig ) is a German historian.

After graduating from high school in 1951, Seeber studied history at the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena . She completed her studies in 1955 as a historian and became a research assistant in the Poland department at the Institute for the History of European People's Democracies at the Karl Marx University in Leipzig . In 1957 she married Gustav Seeber .

Eva Seeber did her doctorate in February 1961 with Felix-Heinrich Gentzen on "The Deportation of Polish Citizens from the so-called General Government to Germany and their Exploitation in the Fascist War Economy (1939–1945)". From September 1968 to 1969 she was a lecturer in the history of the socialist countries at the University of Leipzig. Then she took over the management of the East and Southeast Europe Department at the Central Institute for History of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR in East Berlin . From 1970 to 1989 she was a member of the editorial board of the yearbook for the history of the socialist countries of Europe . In May 1980 she received her PhD B on "The anti-Hitler coalition and the dispute about the emergence of the people's democratic states in Poland and the ČSR". From September 1985 she held a professorship at the Academy of Sciences, which was wound up in 1991. Seeber has been a pensioner since 1992.

Fonts

  • Forced laborers in the fascist war economy. The deportation and exploitation of Polish citizens with special consideration of the situation of the workers from the so-called Generalgouvernement, (1939–1945). German Verl. Der Wiss, Berlin 1964.
  • The GDR historiography on the history of the socialist world system. In: Yearbook for the history of the socialist countries of Europe. 15, No. 1 1971, pp. 67-80.
  • Researching and presenting the history of Poland in the GDR. In: Yearbook for the history of the socialist countries of Europe. 15, No. 1 1971, pp. 81-95.
  • The establishment of people's democratic states and the change in the international balance of power in 1944/45. In: Journal for Historical Science <Berlin>: ZfG. 22, No. 9 1974, pp. 969-983.
  • The people's democratic revolution in Central and Southeastern Europe as a continuous revolutionary process and its influence on the development of the socialist world system. In: Yearbook for the history of the socialist countries of Europe. 18, No. 1 1974, pp. 21-55.
  • The first UN organization UNRRA and its place in the US foreign policy towards the USSR 1943 to 1946. In: The USA and Europe 1917 - 1945: Studies on the history of the relations between the USA and Europe from the Great October Socialist Revolution to the end of Second world war. 1975, pp. 221-263.
  • The Conference of the Allied Great Powers in Tehran in 1943 and the resolution on Poland. In: Journal for Historical Science <Berlin>: ZfG. 26, No. 4 1978, pp. 291-309.
  • The liberating powers and the national sovereignty of the peoples at the end of the Second World War. Shown by comparing the administrative regulations in France and Czechoslovakia. In: Yearbook for History. 30 (1984) 1984, pp. 71-115.
  • The powers of the anti-Hitler coalition and the conflict over Poland and the ČSR 1941 - 1945. Akad.-Verl, Berlin 1984.
  • (Ed.): Decisions in Europe at the time of the people's democratic revolutions 1943–1948. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1984.
  • The Wickersdorf Free School Community during the Nazi era. In: Historical youth research: Yearbook of the archive of the German youth movement. 2000.
  • Refugees or Deserters? On the House of Commons debate on anti-Semitism in the Polish Army in England in the spring of 1944. In: Rassismus, Faschismus, Antifaschismus: Research and considerations dedicated to Kurt Pätzold on the occasion of his 70th birthday. 2000, pp. 84-101.

literature

  • Lothar Mertens : Lexicon of the GDR historians. Biographies and bibliographies on the historians from the German Democratic Republic. Saur, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-598-11673-X .