Kunigunde Ansion
Kunigunde Ansion , b. Hasatty (born May 25, 1863 in Vienna ; † November 16, 1922 there ) was an Austrian writer .
Life
Ansion's parents died early, so she grew up in the home of an English professor. She married Captain Arthur Ansion in 1879. In 1887, Ansion wrote a historical short story that her husband sent to the “Wiener Fremdblatt” without her knowledge. The amendment was accepted for printing. Since the paper showed interest in further works by Ansion, she wrote stories and novellas in the following years, eight of which were published in 1891. Ansion was also successful with her work Die Kochkunst , which was published in its 8th edition in 1903. Ansion published regularly in newspapers such as the "Deutsche Revue", the "Litteratur-Zeitung", "Alt Wien", the "Adels Zeitung", the " Presse " or the magazine "Frauen-Werke" published by Marianne Nigg .
Works
- Various stories by Kunigunde Ansion-Hasatty. Huber & Lahme, Vienna 1891.
- A distance ride price (in "Frauen-Werke", 1st year, No. 4–6, 1894)
- The culinary art. Cookbook of "Wiener Mode". Complete collection of cooking recipes. Textbook of cooking and serving, the preparation of steamed fruit and drinks along with 365 menus for all days of the year (1895)
literature
- Ansion Hasatty, Kunigunde . In: Sophie Pataky (Hrsg.): Lexicon of German women of the pen . Volume 1. Verlag Carl Pataky, Berlin 1898, p. 15 ( digitized version ).
- Franz Brümmer : Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Volume 1. Brockhaus, Leipzig 1913, p. 67.
- 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 German literary history 9), p. 7.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Ansion, Kunigunde |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Anson-Hasatty, Kunigunde; Hasatty, Kunigunde |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 25, 1863 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vienna |
DATE OF DEATH | November 16, 1922 |
Place of death | Vienna |