Rosa Anderson

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Rosa Anderson , pseudonym : Rosa Kaulitz-Niedeck , (born March 10, 1881 as Rosa Kaulitz in Niedeck , † after 1973 ) was a German writer .

Life

She was born on the royal domain of Niedeck and was the daughter of the royal bailiff Georg Vincenz Kaulitz. After visiting the Francke Foundations in Halle (Saale) , she went to Schwertfeger's institute in Göttingen and sat in on literary societies. She then studied at the University of Bonn .

Rosa Kaulitz published her first literary works at the age of 17. She gained national fame through her book, which was published in the year of the outbreak of the First World War , which deals with the topic of "How can women make themselves useful in wartime" and which was widely distributed.

Rosa Kaulitz met the Baltic editor Ernst Anderson, whom she married. Her husband worked in Giessen, Bonn and for the Trier newspaper , among others . He died in 1930. Even after the marriage, Rosa Anderson usually continued to publish under her maiden name, to which she had also added her place of birth.

From 1921 she lived on her husband's estate in Hapsal in Estonia . In 1939 she moved from there to Hamburg .

Works (selection)

  • The old Bonn cemetery and its most famous graves , Bonn, [1910].
  • How can women make themselves useful in wartime? Trier, 1914 (as Rosa Anderson ).
  • The geele box. Goethe's experiences in Trier , Berlin, 1924.
  • The poet's grave on Ösel. A book for friends and admirers of Walter Flex. With a field post letter from Walter Flex. As an attachment: German soldiers' graves at Ösel , Heilbronn, 1926.
  • The mara. The life of a famous singer , Heilbronn, 1929.
  • Hapsal. A Nordic al fresco , Reval, 1930.
  • From the third zone. Experiences and pictures from the occupation , Pritzwalk, 1930.
  • The forgotten from the island , Hamburg, 1946.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Digital Art and Culture Archive Düsseldorf