Marianne Meyer-Krahmer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marianne Meyer-Krahmer (* December 17, 1919 in Königsberg as Marianne Goerdeler ; † December 7, 2011 in Heidelberg ) was a German historian , teacher and writer .

Life

Marianne Goerdeler was born as the daughter of Carl Goerdeler , then mayor of Königsberg, and his wife Anneliese geb. Ulrich. After her father was elected Lord Mayor of Leipzig in 1930 , she went to the Max Klinger School there in the fall of 1930 and graduated from high school at Easter 1938. From Easter 1939 she studied history , German and English at the University of Leipzig (with Otto Vossler , Hermann Heimpel , Hermann August Korff , Theodor Frings , Levin Ludwig Schücking and Hans-Georg Gadamer ). She spent the first and second trimester in 1941 at the University of Freiburg (with Gerhard Ritter , Philipp Witkop , Herbert Koziol , Martin Heidegger and Erik Wolf ). In the winter semester of 1942/1943 she finished her studies in Leipzig. In 1943 she received her doctorate from Vossler and Maschke in Leipzig with a thesis on the imperial idea in the federal plans of 1813/15 .

After the assassination attempt on July 20, 1944 , she and other family members were taken into kin custody and interned in the Stutthof , Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps. After the war she worked as a teacher and headmistress in Baden-Württemberg. She is the mother of the economist Frieder Meyer-Krahmer .

Publications

  • Marianne Goerdeler: The imperial idea in the federal plans 1813/15 and its intellectual background. Aderhold, Weida in Thuringia 1943 (dissertation, University of Leipzig, 1943).
  • Marianne Meyer-Krahmer: Carl Goerdeler and his way into the resistance. A trip to my father's world. Herder-Taschenbuch-Verlag, Freiburg im Breisgau 1989, ISBN 3-451-08553-4 .

Individual evidence

  1. CV. In: Marianne Goerdeler: The imperial idea in the federal plans 1813/15 and their intellectual background. Aderhold, Weida in Thuringia 1943 (dissertation, University of Leipzig, 1943).