Natalie von Milde

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Natalie von Milde
Natalie von Milde

Natalie von Milde , until 1881 Natalie Haller (born March 31, 1850 in Munich , † March 29, 1906 in Weimar ) was a German writer and suffragette . She was an adopted daughter of Rosa von Milde (1827-1906) and Hans Feodor von Milde (1821-1899).

Life

Natalie Haller was born in Munich on March 31, 1850. She was probably the illegitimate daughter of a woman Privy Councilor Jakobsohn. From the end of the 1850s she lived in Weimar with Rosa and Hans Feodor von Milde's household. There she received music lessons from Rosa von Milde and Carl Müllerhartung . Due to diphtheria and permanent weakness of her voice, she had to break off her vocal training. With Karl Volkmar Stoy in Jena, she then took private lessons in psychology in 1879/80 . She was only adopted by the Milde couple in 1881.

Natalie von Milde has given lectures on current women's issues since 1880. In 1888 she joined the German women's association Reform , which was founded by Hedwig Kettler in Weimar that same year. In 1900 she became the first chairwoman of the Association for Women's Education and Women's Studies in Weimar. In 1902 she founded a reading room for women with the support of Princess Pauline von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach . Natalie von Milde was friends with Helene Böhlau , the Stuttgart court librarian Wilhelm Hemsen (1829–1885), Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach and Marie von Bülow , among others . Her literary work deals with issues of women's emancipation such as legal equality between men and women and equal opportunities in education and work.

Fonts

  • Under the pseudonym JM: Goethe on women's emancipation . In: Frauenberuf 2, No. 4/1888.
  • Women's question and men's concerns. A contribution to understanding . Oehmigkes Verlag, Berlin 1890.
  • The judge between man and woman . L. Thelemann, Weimar 1893.
  • Goethe birthday book . A. Karrer, Weimar 1894.
  • Goethe and Schiller and the question of women . H. Seippel, Weimar a. Hamburg 1896.
  • Is the women's movement natural? Lecture, available on October 5, 1896 on behalf of the Hamburg branch of the General German Women's Association . Weimar 1896.
  • Woman's love and life in literature . In: Düna Zeitung of March 31, 1897, p. 1 f. .
  • Our writers and the women's movement . 1900.
  • Family present and future. A reply to Professor Schmoller 's article of the same name . 1902.
  • Maria Pavlovna . A memorial sheet for November 9, 1904 . 1904.
  • As editor: Letters in poetry and prose from Peter Cornelius to Theodor and Rosa von Milde . Weimar 1901.

literature

Web links

Commons : Natalie von Milde  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files
Wikisource: Natalie von Milde  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. Ulrike Müller: The clever women of Weimar . 1st edition 2007. page 107
  2. Birgit Spanier, Doris Weilandt:  Milde, Natalie von. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 17, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1994, ISBN 3-428-00198-2 , p. 505 f. ( Digitized version ).