Hedwig von Schreibershofen
Hedwig von Schreibershofen , b. Strauss (born September 14, 1840 in Bückeburg , † October 28, 1922 in Hanover ) was a German writer .
Life
She was a daughter of the statesman and poet Viktor von Strauss and Torney and his wife Albertine von Torney and sister of Hugo von Strauss and Torney and Lothar von Strauss and Torney . She grew up in the religious family and attended the secondary school for girls in Bückeburg, which was under the supervision of Princess Ida Karoline Luise zu Schaumburg-Lippe of Waldeck-Pyrmont (1796-1869). Hedwig von Schreibershofen was in friendly contact with Princess Elisabeth Wilhelmine (1841–1926), who was only a year younger than her, and through her was given the opportunity to get to know the visitors of the Fürstenhof. She accompanied her father on trips to Frankfurt am Main, among others , and through him came into contact with writers and scholars of her time.
In 1861 Hedwig von Schreibershofen suffered a nervous disease that was to last until 1862. She was treated in the summer of 1862 on Norderney , where she met the royal Saxon lieutenant Johannes Freiherr von Schreibershofen (1828-1902). They married in 1863 and Hedwig von Schreibershofen followed him to Dresden in the same year . Hedwig von Schreibershofen lived with her husband in various Saxon garrisons until 1866 and spent the years from 1866 to 1870 alone in Dresden. After moving to Blasewitz in 1873, the couple lived again in Dresden from 1876, around 1898 on Sophienstrasse 6 in Oberlößnitz , but made frequent trips to Italy and the Alps . The marriage had two sons.
In 1873 the daughter of her brother Lothar was born, the later poet and writer Lulu von Strauss and Torney (1873-1956).
After Johannes von Schreibershofen died in 1902, Hedwig von Schreibershofen moved to Munich in 1906 and to Karlsruhe the following year . She died in Hanover in 1922.
Works
- The atonement. Novel in 3 volumes. Janke, Berlin 1887.
- In the interplay of life. Novel. Janke, Berlin 1892.
- Count Essterhazy. Novel. Costenoble, Jena 1895.
- David Beronski. From my uncle's papers. Novel. Hillger, Berlin / Eisenach / Leipzig 1898.
- Antonie. Novel. Taendler, Berlin 1899. (2nd edition 1906)
- Italian. 6 novellas. No information on place and publisher 1901.
- Jan van Knebel. From the time of the inquisition in Antwerp. Narrative. Müller, Halle / Bremen 1903.
- Mira. Novel. Taendler, Berlin 1903.
- Hot blood and other things. Novellas. 1904.
- Sennorita Dolores. Novel. Habbel, Regensburg 1905.
- Under the law. Novel. Habbel, Regensburg 1909.
- Dark ways. Stories. German Evangelical Book u. Tract Society, Berlin 1920.
literature
- Franz Brümmer: Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Volume 6. Brockhaus, Leipzig 1913, pp. 305-306.
- Elisabeth Friedrichs: The German-speaking women writers of the 18th and 19th centuries. A lexicon . Metzler, Stuttgart 1981, ISBN 3-476-00456-2 , (Repertories on the History of German Literature 9), p. 278.
- Heinrich Groß (Hrsg.): German female poets and writers in words and pictures . Volume 3. Goldstein'sche Buchhandlung, Frankfurt am Main 1893, pp. 96-104.
- Schreibershofen, Mrs. Hedwig von . In: Sophie Pataky (Hrsg.): Lexicon of German women of the pen . Volume 2. Verlag Carl Pataky, Berlin 1898, p. 272 f. ( Digitized version ).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ No copy can be found
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Schreibershofen, Hedwig von |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Strauss and Torney, Hedwig von (maiden name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 14, 1840 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Buckeburg |
DATE OF DEATH | October 28, 1922 |
Place of death | Hanover |