Franziska Lackner

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Franziska "Ninni" Lackner (born June 14, 1897 in Brno , Moravia ; † January 15, 1975 in Vienna , Austria ) was an Austrian local researcher as well as a teacher and school director .

Life

Franziska Lackner was born on June 14, 1897 in the Moravian capital Brno. After completing her training at the teacher training institute at elementary and secondary schools, she was forced to retire in 1936 due to the double- earner law. After the Second World War , she worked between 1946 and 1950 as a consultant for the preservation of monuments and the cityscape in the City of Vienna's Department of Culture. Together with Hans Pemmer , whose long-term collaborator and companion she was, she published the book Der Wiener Prater once and now in 1935 . In the Official Journal of the City of Vienna , the Viennese historian leaves , as well as in various other newspapers and magazines published essays Lackner. In 1947, a collaboration with Pemmer resulted in the book Der Döblinger Friedhof. Its dead, its monuments . Due to the proximity to Pemmer, she also campaigned for the Pratermuseum, which he founded in his private apartment in 1933, and worked intensively on building the museum. Lackner also helped move the collection from Pemmer's apartment to the Vienna planetarium ; Pemmer donated his collection to the City of Vienna on the occasion of the opening of the planetarium in 1964. From that year until 1972 she was also involved in setting up the Gastronomic Museum. Lackner died on January 15, 1975 at the age of 77 in her apartment at Staudgasse 20 in Vienna's 18th district, Währing .

Works (selection)

  • The Vienna Prater then and now . together with Hans Pemmer . Youth and People, Vienna 1935.
  • The Dobling cemetery. Its dead, its monuments . together with Hans Pemmer . Vienna: Rausch 1947
  • The Währinger Strasse . together with Hans Pemmer . Association for the preservation and promotion of the Alsergrund local history museum, Vienna 1968.
  • The Lange Gasse . together with Hans Pemmer . District Museum Josefstadt, Vienna 1976.

Literature & Sources (selection)

Web links

Franziska Lackner in the Vienna History Wiki of the City of Vienna

Individual evidence

  1. Prof. Hans Pemmer, the tireless popular educator ( memento from April 19, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on December 3, 2017