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・ Monika Kruszona
・ Monika Kryemadhi
・ Monika Kuliš
・ Monika Kuszyńska
・ Monika Kvaková
・ Monika Lee
・ Monika Lehmann
・ Monika Leu
・ Monika Linkytė
・ Monika Ludwig
・ Monika Lundi
・ Monika MacDonagh-Pajerová
・ Monika Maciejewska
・ Monika Maid
・ Monika Maierhofer
Monika Mann
・ Monika Maron
・ Monika Matysová
・ Monika Mauch
・ Monika Merl
・ Monika Meyer
・ Monika Meyer (footballer)
・ Monika Michalik
・ Monika Migała
・ Monika Mockovčáková
・ Monika Mrklas
・ Monika Mrozowska
・ Monika Myszk
・ Monika Míčková
・ Monika Müller


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Monika Mann : ウィキペディア英語版
Monika Mann

Monika Mann (7 June 1910 – 17 March 1992) was a German author and feature writer. She was born in Munich, Germany, the fourth of six children of the Nobel Prize–winning author Thomas Mann and Katia, née Katharina Pringsheim.
She trained as a pianist and her early attempts at a musical career seemed promising, but were not met with success and she instead pursued a career as a writer. She married in 1939 but lost her husband the following year, when the ship on which they were travelling to Canada was sunk by a German submarine. Later that year she joined her family in Princeton, New Jersey, and was granted US citizenship in 1952.
Between 1954 and 1986, she lived with her partner Antonio Spadaro in ''Villa Monacone'' on Capri. This was her most productive time as a writer and her books and several magazine articles were written during this period. After the death of her partner she left Capri and spent her last years until her death with her brother Golo's adopted family in Leverkusen, Germany.
==Family and early life==
Thomas Mann was already well established as a novelist and short story writer at the time of Monika's birth, although his Nobel Prize came many years later. Her mother, born Katharina Hedwig Pringsheim, was the daughter of the German Jewish mathematician and artist Alfred Pringsheim and the actress Hedwig Pringsheim.〔Wikipedia page Katia Mann
Monika had an elder sister, Erika (1905–1969) and two elder brothers, Klaus (1906–1949) and "Golo" (1909–1994). A year after Monika's birth her mother was ill with a lung complaint and was one of the first patients to be admitted to the ''Wald Sanatorium'' in Davos, Switzerland.〔The Wald Sanatorium is now the (Wald Hotel, Davos )〕 There was an interval of eight years before the birth of the last two children, a sister Elisabeth (1918–2002) and a brother Michael (1919–1977). Her uncle was the novelist Heinrich Mann.
She was not her parents' favourite. Her father confessed frankly in his diary that, of the six children, he preferred the two oldest, Klaus and Erika, and little Elisabeth.〔Thomas Mann diary entry of 10 March 1920.〕 Her mother wrote in 1939 to Klaus that she was determined not to say any more unfriendly words about Monika and to be kind and helpful.〔Katia Mann letter of 29 August 1939〕 In the family letters and chronicles she was often described as weird. ". . . after a three week stay here (in the parental home) she is still the same old dull quaint Mönle (her nickname in the family), pilfering from the larder . . .".〔
After boarding school at Schule Schloss Salem she trained as a pianist in Lausanne and spent her young years in Paris, Munich, Frankfurt and Berlin. In 1933 when Hitler came to power she emigrated with her parents to Sanary-sur-Mer in southeastern France.〔 In 1934 she studied music and history of art in Florence, taking private piano tuition from the Italian composer Luigi Dallapiccola.〔From the article on Monika Mann in German Wikipedia.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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