Helene Glaue

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Helene Glaue (born January 27, 1876 in Kassel , † December 24, 1967 in Überlingen ) was a German educator, publicist and social politician ( DDP ).

Live and act

Helene Bulß was the daughter of the opera singer Paul Bulß and his wife Olga Eva Dirut. She attended the Louisenstift in Niederlößnitz , the higher girls' school in Berlin and the Chillon Institute near Montreux . Subsequently, she was trained at the teachers' seminar in Berlin and in 1895 passed the teacher exams for secondary schools for girls. She was only active as a teacher for a short time. In 1898 she married the theologian and church historian Paul Glaue (1872–1944) and had four daughters. In 1911 the family came to Jena, where he was a university lecturer until 1938.

After the First World War , Glaue co-founded the DDP. From 1919 to May 1920 she was a member of the state parliament of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach for her party . In Jena, she was also socially involved and in the 1920s she became a member of the central directorate of the Patriotic Institute of the Red Cross (called Haupt-Frauenverein for short ). From 1927 to 1933 she was editor of the papers of the Thuringian women's association of the Red Cross . After her husband retired in 1942, they moved to Überlingen.

Fonts

  • The raptures of the young girls. Eger, Leipzig 1914.
  • One hundred and ten years of the main women's association in Jena. Jena 1925.
  • School devotions.

See also

literature

  • Heike Stange : Documentation. In: Thuringian Landtag (ed.) “Now finally women can become members of parliament!” Thuringian women parliamentarians and their politics. Hain, Weimar 2003, pp. 216f, ISBN 3-89807-039-5 .
  • Design and Reality. Women in Jena 1900 to 1933. Rudolstadt and Jena 2001. S. 388.
  • Life paths in Thuringia. Volume 1 (2000), No. 33.
  • Jochen Lengemann : Thuringian state parliaments 1919–1952: Biographisches Handbuch (=  publications of the Historical Commission for Thuringia, large series . Volume 1 , no. 4 ). 1st edition. Böhlau, Cologne 2013, ISBN 978-3-412-22179-9 , pp. 288-289 .

Individual evidence

  1. DNB : Glaue, Helene
  2. According to Heike Stange ( Documentation , p. 217) the place of death is Jena.
  3. DNB: Glaue, Paul