Hedwig Fleischhacker

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Hedwig Fleischhacker , married Hedwig Uebersberger , (born June 19, 1906 in Vienna , Austria-Hungary ; died September 28, 1978 in Munich ) was a German historian from Eastern Europe .

Live and act

The daughter of a court counselor studied history , art history and linguistics ( Russian ) at the University of Vienna and received her doctorate there in 1929/30. She worked as a librarian. In 1933 she joined the NSDAP . Then she followed Hans Uebersberger to Breslau in 1934 and to Berlin in 1935. There she completed her habilitation in 1938 and received an assistant position. At the end of 1944, she and her husband and three-year-old son Alexander fled to relatives in Geinberg in the Innviertel . After the war she worked as a freelancer in Munich and published several works on Catherine II of Russia.

Fonts (selection)

  • The constitutional and international law foundations of Moscow's foreign policy , 1938; 2nd edition Darmstadt 1959
  • The German prisoners of war in the Soviet Union: the hunger factor , On the history of the German prisoners of war of the Second World War; Vol. 3, Bielefeld [u. a.], Gieseking 1965
  • With pen and scepter. Katharina II as an author , DVA, Stuttgart 1978
  • The three centuries of Kassian Timofejev , Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 1960

literature

  • The Berlin University in the Nazi Era , Vol. I. Structures and People , ed. v. Rüdiger Vom Bruch, Christoph Jahr, Rebecca Schaarschmidt, Steiner, Stuttgart 2005, p. 200 ISBN 978-3-515-08657-8
  • Brigitte Mazohl-Wallnig: meat chopper, Hedwig. In: Brigitta Keintzel, Ilse Korotin (Ed.): Scientists in and from Austria. Life - work - work. Böhlau, Vienna / Cologne / Weimar 2002, ISBN 3-205-99467-1 , pp. 179–181.

Individual evidence

  1. Hedwig Fleischhacker - Munzinger biography. Retrieved July 2, 2020 .
  2. Heike Anke Berger: German historians 1920–1970. History between science and politics. Campus, Frankfurt am Main 2007, ISBN 978-3-593-38443-6 , p. 277.