Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hedwig Pringsheim (born Gertrud Hedwig Anna Dohm; 13 July 1855 – 27 July 1942) was a German actress . Born in Berlin, she was the daughter of Ernst Dohm and Hedwig Dohm-Schleh, who were Jewish converts to Christianity. She married Alfred Pringsheim.

  2. Gertrude Hedwig Anna Pringsheim (geborene Dohm; * 13. Juli 1855 in Berlin; † 27. Juli 1942 in Zürich) war eine deutsche Schauspielerin. Sie war die Schwiegermutter des Schriftstellers Thomas Mann . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Schriften. 3 Siehe auch. 4 Literatur. 5 Weblinks. 6 Einzelnachweise. Leben.

  3. 30 de nov. de 2021 · An edition of the diary that Hedwig Pringsheim kept for almost six decades has recently been published , but perhaps an even more intimate insight into the life of the Pringsheims is found in Hedwig’s long correspondence with the political journalist Maximilian Harden , who was said at the beginning of the twentieth century to be ...

    • kch@balliol.ox.ac.uk
  4. En 1879 se casó con la actriz Hedwig Pringsheim (Dohm de soltera), hija de Ernst Dohm, un conocido periodista de Berlín, y de Hedwig Dohm (nacida Schlesinger o, abreviadamente como ella firmaba, Schleh), también conocida escritora y activista feminista. [4] Tuvieron cinco hijos: Erik, Peter, Heinz y los gemelos Klaus y Katia.

  5. In 1877 Pringsheim submitted his habilitation thesis to the University of Munich and began teaching there as a privatdozent. Two years later, in 1879, he married Hedwig Dohm. Hedwig's father was Ernst Dohm, a well known Berlin journalist, and her mother was Hedwig Schleh. Hedwig Dohm was an actress in Berlin before her marriage.

  6. 30 de nov. de 2021 · PDF | On Nov 30, 2021, K. C. Hannabuss published The Complex Life of Alfred Pringsheim | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate

  7. early years of the marriage, Katia's mother, Hedwig Pringsheim, daughter of a pio-neering feminist, Hedwig Dohm, outshines all others. Hedwig Pringsheim was a de-lightful letter writer and diarist and emerges in both books as the surprise star witness. Her perspicacious, satirical observations on life in Davos, written after a visit with her