翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Hee
・ Hee (Korean name)
・ Hee Burmiok
・ Hee Gyathang Monastery
・ Hee Haw
・ Hee Haw (album)
・ Hee Haw (EP)
・ Hee Il Cho
・ Hee Loy Sian
・ Hee Oh
・ Hee Seo
・ Hee Shrinchi Ichha
・ Hee Tien Lai
・ Hee Yit Foong
・ Hedwig Dohm
Hedwig Dransfeld
・ Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp
・ Hedwig glass
・ Hedwig Gorski
・ Hedwig Haß
・ Hedwig Jagiellon
・ Hedwig Jagiellon (1408–1431)
・ Hedwig Jagiellon, Duchess of Bavaria
・ Hedwig Jagiellon, Electress of Brandenburg
・ Hedwig Kettler
・ Hedwig Kohn
・ Hedwig Lachmann
・ Hedwig Langecker
・ Hedwig Marquardt
・ Hedwig of Brandenburg


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Hedwig Dransfeld : ウィキペディア英語版
Hedwig Dransfeld

Hedwig Dransfeld (24 February 1871 – 13 March 1925) was a German Catholic feminist, writer and member of parliament.〔(Hedwig Dransfeld ), German National Library, retrieved 17 January 2012.〕
==Biography==
Hedwig Dransfeld was born in Hacheney (now Dortmund), Germany to the Romberg family (German aristocrats). Her father, Clemens Dransfeld, was a senior forester, and her mother, Elise Fleischhauer, was a doctor's daughter and a Catholic. Dransfeld's father died when she was three, and her mother died five years later. She was brought up by her maternal grandmother until she, too, died, at which point Dransfeld was placed in an orphanage.
At the age of sixteen she began to train at the ''Königlichen Katholischen Lehrerinnen-Seminar'' ("German Catholic Teachers' Seminar") in Paderborn. During her training, she contracted a form of tuberculosis that entered her bones, and lost her left arm and a heel. Despite this she passed her exams with distinction in 1890 and began a teaching career that culminated in her appointment as headmistress of the Ursuline School in Werl.
She began to write, and published books of poetry. Later she wrote for ''Die christliche Frau'' ("the Christian Woman"), a German newspaper, and in 1905 took over the editorship of that journal and made it an organ of the ''Katholischen deutschen Frauenbunds'' ("Catholic German Women's Federation", abbreviated KDF).
After women were admitted to universities in Germany, in 1908 Dransfield studied ''Kulturwissenschaft'' ("Cultural Studies") in Münster and, later, Bonn.
In January 1912, she made a noted speech on women in the church and religious life at the first German Women's Congress at the Reichstag in Berlin. The Berlin ''Vorwärts'' (a newspaper) described her as "the most important woman alive today", and in October 1912 she gave up her work as a teacher to become full-time chairman of the KDF.
After the November revolution, Dransfeld was nominated for ''Zentrum für die Weimarer Nationalversammlung'' ("Centre for the Weimar Republic National Assembly") and ''Preußischen Landesversammlung'' ("Prussian National Assembly"). She played a major part of the new social legislation, and from 1920 until her death was a senior member of the ''Rheinischen Zentrumspartei'' ("Rhenish Centre Party"). She was also appointed Chairman of the Reich Women's Advisory Board of that party. In 1922 she retired from chairing the KDF on health grounds, but remained a member of the Reichstag.
She died in the Ursuline Convent, and her grave is in a cemetery in Werl.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Hedwig Dransfeld」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.