664 research outputs found
Frieda Lawrence Letters 1907-1954, 2010
The collection holds some letters of Frieda Lawrence, primarily sent to her sister Else Richthofen-Jaffé and Else's son Friedel Jaffé. Included in the first folder of the collection is a summary of the letters by Guenther Roth, which also provides context for them and biographical details on Frieda Lawrence.Frieda Lawrence, born 1879 in Metz, Germany, the sister of Else Richthofen-Jaffé. 1912-1930, after her marriage to Ernest Weekley, she was married to the author D.H. Lawrence. She died 1956 in Taos, New Mexico.The Frieda Lawrence letters are part of the Christopher Jeffrey Collection, AR 25348.Frieda Lawrence was born in 1879 in Metz, Germany, the daughter of Baron Friedrich Ernst Emil Ludwig von Richthofen. Her elder sister was Else Richthofen-Jaffé and she had a younger sister named Johanna. Frieda’s first marriage was to professor Ernest Weekley, with whom she had three children: Charles Montague, Elsa, and Barbara Joy. In 1914 she married the author D.H. Lawrence, whom she had known since 1912. After his death in 1930, she returned to the ranch given to them by Mabel Luhan, called Kiowa Ranch, in Taos, New Mexico and spent much of the rest of her life promoting Lawrence’s work. In 1934 her memoirs of her life with D.H. Lawrence, Not I, but the Wind, were published. In 1950 she married Angelo Ravagli. She died in 1956 in Taos, New Mexico.Finding aid available onlineProcesseddigitize
Frieda Fuchs Collection 1907-1957
The collection contains materials representing the academic career of Frieda Fuchs, from her early school years, through her doctoral studies and research into psychology in Germany, to her career in the United States. The following material is from her earlier years in Germany: grade certificates from the Grossherzogliche Seminar für Volksschullehrerinnen in Darmstadt indicating good marks (1907-1914); her teaching contract for the Israelitische Volksschule (1916), certificates confirming satisfactory studies and a diploma granting a doctoral degree from the Universtät Frankfurt am Main, in recognition of her dissertation "Experimentelle Studien über das Bewegungsnachbild" (1927-1928). The following material is from either shortly before or after her emigration to the United States: editions of her curriculum vitae (1940-1941); letters of recommendation, job correspondence and offers (1939-1942), report entitled "Von Nachbildern und ihrer Bedeutung," undated. Also included is an offprint, signed by the author, Dr. S. Hirsch, entitled "Die letzten Millimeter der arteriellen Strombahn," and two photographs of Frieda Fuchs approximately ages 30 and 50.Frieda Fuchs was born in Dieburg in 1893. She studied at the teacher's college in Darmstadt and the University in Frankfurt, receiving her doctoral degree in in 1928. From 1914 through 1940 she taught at the Israelitische Volksschule in Frankfurt am Main. She also gave classes at the Heim des Juedischen Frauenbundes in Neu-Isenburg. She immigrated to the United States in 1940 and found employment with the congregation of Rabbi Dr. Breuer in New York. At the same time she enlisted the support of the American Psychological Association Committee on Displayed Foreign Psychologists. She died in New York in 1974.Processed for digitizationdigitized2007110
Gibson, Mrs. Frieda M.
Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Mrs. Frieda M. Gibso
St. Catherine of Sienna
Sister of St. Dominic (Nursing).
St. Catherine of Sienna, 1206 W. 4th, McCook, Nebraska, 1919-
St. John\u27s, Spalding, Nebraska, 1944-
Model dressed by Sr. M. Frieda, St. Catherine\u27shttps://digitalcommons.unmc.edu/dolls/1042/thumbnail.jp
Arhuaco Mädchen führt ihr Schweinchen zur Nahrungssuche aus
Suavemente, como solo una pequeña niña india puede sonreír, me sonríe . (Esta cita corresponde al documento Happy Savannahs, escrito por la autora Schecker, Frieda, en la edición del libro de 1940. Esta cita se encuentra en el idioma original en la página del Museo Etnológico de los Museos Nacionales de Berlín - Patrimonio Cultural Prusiano).Gently, as only a small Indian girl can smile, she smiles at me. (This quote corresponds to the document Happy Savannahs, written by the author Schecker, Frieda, in the edition of the 1940 book. This quote is in the original language on the page of the Ethnological Museum of the National Museums of Berlin - Cultural Heritage Prussian)
M & L Jaargang 11/5
Suzanne Van Aerschot-Van Haeverbeeck Beschouwingen bij een inventarisatie. [The Voeren region Reflections on an inventory.]Frieda Schlusmans De Voerstreek. Ter inleiding. [The Voeren region. An introduction and historical background.]Hubert Bats Het Voerense landschap. [The landscape of Voeren.]Frieda Schlusmans De Voergemeenten. Agrarische nederzettingsmodellen en hun componenten. [The Voeren boroughs Rural settlement models and their components.]Frieda Schlusmans - Sint-Pieters-Voeren en de Commanderie van de Duitse Orde [Sint-Pieters-Voeren commandery of the Teutonic Order]SummaryM&L Binnenkran
Ruth Hannas letters, MSS.0621
Abstract: Letters from Frieda Lawrence and Angelino Ravagli to Hannas from 1924 through 1958.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains letters and cards written to Hannas, beginning in 1924, from Frieda von Richthofen Lawrence (D. H. Lawrence's widow) and her partner, Angelino "Angie" Ravagli. The letters show an increasing friendship between the correspondents. The final postcard is from Angelino two years after Frieda's death as he is preparing to sail from New York to Europe.Biographical/Historical Note: Ruth Hannas was born on 26 September 1893 in Greeley, Colorado. She met Freida von Richthofen Lawrence in 1923 aboard the "Orbita." She was a teacher in Berkeley, California, and in Greensboro, North Carolina. Ruth Hannas died in January 1976 in Birmingham, Alabama.A distant relative of the "Red Baron" Manfred von Richthofen, Frieda von Richthofen was born on 11 August 1879 to an aristocratic family in Metz, Germany. In 1899 she moved to England after marrying Ernest Weekley, a much older man than she; the couple had three children. Frieda met the author D. H. Lawrence in March 1912 and the two eloped to Germany, leaving her children behind. After her divorce from Weekley, Frieda and Lawrence married in 1914.Lawrence suffered from frail health and the couple travelled widely, leaving post-war England at the earliest opportunity. They eventually settled at Kiowa Ranch near Taos, New Mexico. They left New Mexico for Lawrence's health and went to Scandicci, Italy, near Tuscany. After Lawrence's death in Vence, France in 1930, Frieda returned to the ranch at Taos to live with Angelo Ravagli, with whom she had carried on an intermittent affair since 1925. In 1935, Frieda sent Angelo to Vence, to have Lawrence's body exhumed and cremated and his ashes brought back to the ranch. They married in 1950. Frieda died on her 77th birthday in Taos
Searching For a Home - Hauzenberger, Edward and Frieda Family
Notes - Freda Wood provides a brief history of her family, the Hauzenberqers, who immigrated to Alberta from Switzerland in 1912. Her father, Edward Hauzenberqer was born in Switzerland on April 22, 1883. Her mother, Frieda, was born on June 19, 1885, also in Switzerland. They were married in January of 1912 and immigrated to Canada the same year. They lived in Battle River County, St. Paul, Exshaw, and Calgary, before Edward, Freda (daughter) and family moved up to Athabasca. Freda married Emile Gosselin in 1933 and had two children. The family moved up to Athabasca, where Freda would teach at the South Athabasca School in 1945. Emile passed away that year, and Freda remarried Bill Wood the next year. Bill and Freda had three children together. Freda taught for 35 years in the Athabasca area. Freda's mother, Frieda passed away in 1960. After that, Edward discovered there were still homesteads available north of Athabasca. He purchased a piece of land for himself and moved a caboose up there to live in. While living out there Edward had many adventures with bears, deer and Athabasca nature. When living on the land got to be too much, he moved in with Bill and Freda. He died at the age of ninety-three (6 pages
Entretien avec Frieda EKOTTO, professeur de littérature comparée et d’études africaines: Entretien patrimonial conduit par Alexandra GALITZINE-LOUMPET
Frieda EKOTTO has been a Professor of Afroamerican and African Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Michigan since 1994. She is the recipient of numerous grants and awards, including a Ford Foundation seed grant for research and collaborative work with institutions of higher learning in Africa. Dr. Ekotto has developed and taught a wide range of innovative courses on literature and law in France; literature and film in Africa, the Caribbean and Maghreb; postcolonial narratives by Francophone women and minorities; and representations of family and friendship in Francophone film and literature. She is the author of six books, three of them at l’Harmattan eds (Paris). She contributes regularly to Afrikadaa, an online magazine of contemporary African art. Her most recent book is entitled What Color is Black ? Race and Sex across the French Atlantic (Lexington Press, 2011). Professor Ekotto teaches regularly in China and has published numerous articles on cultural interactions between China and Africa. She received the Nicolàs Guillèn Prize for Philosophical Literature in 2014. She will be a Senior fellow (DEA programme) at the Fondation Maison des sciences de l’Homme from April 15 to May 15, 2014.Frieda EKOTTO, enseignant chercheur et écrivain, revient sur son parcours scientifiques et sur les thématiques principales de son oeuvre la littérature africaine et la place de l'Afrique, le genre et la race, l'homosexualité, l'art, axes polymorphes qui abordent de différentes manières la notion centrale de la douleur.Alexandra GALITZINE-LOUMPET est anthropologue, coordinatrice ANR EsCA, coresponsable de l'initiative de recherche Non-lieux de l'exil à la FMSH, Paris.Elle travaille actuellement à la Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme après avoir longtemps enseigné à l’Université de Yaoundé I (Cameroun). Elle étudie tout particulièrement la culture matérielle, les patrimonialisations, les représentations de l’altérité (épistémologiques, muséographiques), et depuis quelques années les objets de/en exil et notamment la culture matérielle des exilés. Parmi ses publications récentes : “L’embarras patrimonial. Mémoires croisées Galitzine/Pouchkine dans l’oussad’ba Viaziomy (Moscou)” dans Architecture et patrimoine dans les Etats post-soviétiques, sous la dir. de Taline Ter Minassian (PUR 2013) ; Pour une typologie des objets de l’exil (2013) http://wpfmsh.hypotheses.org/362, « Exil(Objets) » dans Glossaire des mobilités culturelles, Zilà Bernd et Norah Dei Cas eds. Peter Lang eds, mai 2014). D'autres textes sont en cours de publication.Elle est co-directrice du programme “Non-lieux de l’exil” (FMSH)
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