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・ Franziska Pigulla
・ Franziska Preuß
・ Franziska Rochat-Moser
・ Franziska Scanagatta
・ Franziska Schenk
・ Franziska Stading
・ Franziska Steffen
・ Franziska Tausig
・ Franziska Tesaurus
・ Franziska Tiburtius
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・ Franziska Troegner
・ Franziska van Almsick
・ Franziska von Hohenheim
・ Franziska von Karma
Franziska von Reitzenstein
・ Franziska Weber
・ Franziska Weisz
・ Franziska zu Königsegg-Aulendorf
・ Franziskaner (disambiguation)
・ Franziskaner-Klosterkirche
・ Franziskanerkloster (Dresden)
・ Franziskus Herzan von Harras
・ Franziskus von Bettinger
・ Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schönborn
・ Franziskus von Sales Bauer
・ Franzjosefsfeld
・ Franzl
・ Franzl Lang
・ Franzo Grande Stevens


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Franziska von Reitzenstein : ウィキペディア英語版
Franziska von Reitzenstein

Franziska Freifrau von Reitzenstein, née von Nyss,〔(''Reitzenstein, Franziska Freifrau v.'' ) (German), Lexikon deutscher Frauen der Feder.〕 alias "Franz von Nemmersdorf" (September 19, 1834 – June 4, 1896) was a German novelist.
==Biography==
Von Reitzenstein was born the daughter of a judicial counselor (Oberappellations-Gerichtsrat) in Castle Härdenstein in Swabia. She was well educated and moved in aristocratic and noble circles. In 1849 she married the royal Bavarian Rittmeister Freiherr von Reitzenstein. After her husband died in 1853, she travelled to several places of Italy and was inspired to write by Karl Gutzkow. She randomized her male pen name "Franz" in a topographical, statistical lexicon, whereas Nemmersdorf was the former name of a settlement in East Prussia, today Mayakovskoye.
Under her pen name she wrote novels in particular, also some with historical themes. Later she followed in Paolo Mantegazza's footsteps and dedicated her work ''Kampf der Geschlechter'' to him, which dealt with the relations between women and men and of the question of women's rights. She wrote also for journals and newspapers, amongst them the "Allgemeine Zeitung" in Augsburg, the "Münchener Zeitung" (literally: Munich's newspaper) as well as the appending "Unterhaltungsblatt" (entertainment paper), also Keil's „Die Gartenlaube“ and several papers in Vienna. Von Reitzenstein owned a house in Munich, where she lived with her cats, which was why she was called "cat baroness" by her neighbors〔(ADB (de) )〕 She is buried in the Old Southern Cemetery in Munich. Her grave tomb was designed by Friedrich von Thiersch.

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