Hannah Ackermann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hannah Ackermann (born May 27, 1881 in Magdeburg , † 1962 in Trennfurt ) was a German politician ( DVP ) and participant in the bourgeois women's movement in the Weimar Republic .

Life

Hannah Ackermann, actually Maria Johanna (Hanna) Caroline Ackermann, b. Andreae, was a daughter of the merchant and shipowner Hans Andreae (* 1852; † July 11, 1901 in Magdeburg, owner of the "Elbe-Schiffahrt Hans Andreae" Magdeburg), and of Dorothea Caroline Martha Andreae, geb. Müller, (born April 28, 1855, † 1942 in Magdeburg). Hannah Ackermann was married to Oskar Ackermann (born March 7, 1886 in Cologne, † 1950 in Trennfurt, Lower Franconia). Her brothers were professors Wilhelm Andreae (* 1888; † 1962) and Friedrich Andreae (* 1879; † 1939). The politician Kathinka von Oheimb was Hannah Ackermann's close private friend and politically connected to her in the party. Hannah Ackermann was the foster mother of Kathinka von Oheimb's daughter from the second marriage, Elisabeth Albert , and briefly of the son Heinz Albert.

Hannah Ackermann, her husband and their two children were the only guests outside the family at Kathinka von Oheimb's wedding with Siegfried von Kardorff on April 9, 1927 in Goslar . Elisabeth Albert married the son of Hannah Ackermann, Hans Albert Ackermann, (born October 11, 1903 Magdeburg; † June 19, 1940 during the French campaign). This marriage resulted in four children, the actress Kathrin Ackermann and Peter, Christoph and Thomas. Hannah Ackermann's daughter Barbara (nickname: Bärchen, born June 30, 1910 Magdeburg; † August 15, 1995 in Clarens (Switzerland)), was married to Vital Daelen, a son of Kathinka von Oheimb's first marriage.

politics

She was active in the German People's Party in Magdeburg. She was a long-time member of the board of the DVP constituency association Magdeburg-Anhalt and moved in for the previous MP Zehle from 1931 to 1933 as a member of the DVP in the provincial parliament of the Prussian province of Saxony in Merseburg . During the Weimar Republic, a total of 14 women held a mandate in the provincial parliament of the province of Saxony ; six of them for the KPD , five for the SPD , two for the DNVP and one for the German People's Party, namely Hannah Ackermann. She cultivated lively political correspondence and contacts etc. a. with Kathinka von Oheimb, Frau Kramsta von Prittwitz from Magdeburg DVP and Rosa Manus . In 1929 she worked for Kathinka von Oheimb at the International Women's Congress in Berlin. She opened a branch of the women's club in Magdeburg in 1930.

In 1931 her article “The welfare of women in the Middle Ages” was published in the book “Die Kultur der Frau”. The book was the standard work of the bourgeois women's movement in the Weimar Republic.

Fonts

  • A Magdeburg merchant in Paris 1814 (Bonte, Isaac) - Magdeburger Mondagsblatt 1906 volume 58
  • Magdeburg's "Higher School for Daughters" in their development - Magdeburgische Zeitung Faber-Verlag 1930
  • The welfare of women in the Middle Ages , in: The culture of women - A life symphony of the woman of the XX. Century, pages 297–302, Verlag für Kultur und Wissenschaft Berlin 1931

Individual evidence

  1. the family chronicle of the Müller family and the diaries of Aunt Marie Schrauth
  2. http://www.frauenorte.net/html/merseburg.html
  3. Stolze 2007: The female "Gentlemen" p. 140 f. after Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb (1879–1962) in the Weimar Republic by Cornelia Baddack 2016 V&R unipress Verlag
  4. http://www.die-linke-burgenlandkreis.de/presse/landesmagazin/ausgabe-12008/buergerrechte-fuer-frauen/
  5. Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb (1879–1962) in the Weimar Republic by Cornelia Baddack 2016 V&R unipress Verlag
  6. Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb "Politics and Life Confessions", Paul Georg Hopfer Verlag Tübingen approx. 1962
  7. Rosa Manus (1881–1942): The International Life and Legacy of a Jewish Dutch… edited by Myriam Everard, Francisca de Haan
  8. Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb (1879–1962) in the Weimar Republic by Cornelia Baddack 2016 V&R unipress Verlag
  9. Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb (1879–1962) in the Weimar Republic by Cornelia Baddack 2016 V&R unipress Verlag