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Claire von Greyerz

Clara von Greyerz (née Forster; 21 November 1789 – 3 February 1839) was a German papercutting artist. She was born in Mainz, the daughter of world traveller Georg Forster and his wife Therese. Her father became a revolutionary in the Republic of Mainz from 1792 until his death in 1794, while her mother lived in the Neuchâtel area with her lover and eventual husband Ludwig Ferdinand Huber. The family moved to Tübingen, Stuttgart and Ulm, where her stepfather died in December 1804, when she was already engaged to the forester Gottlieb von Greyerz [de]. They married in 1805, living in Stoffenried, Günzburg, Augsburg and Bayreuth, and had ten children between 1806 and 1832. In Augsburg, von Greyerz became acquainted with Hortense de Beauharnais, and her children played with Hortense's son, the future Napoleon III of France. Von Greyerz was known for her papercuts, some of which she swapped with fellow artist Luise Duttenhofer. In 1836, she visited Hortense at Arenenberg and published a report of her experiences there.

Clara Forster in 1805, painted by Ludovike Simanowiz

Early life

Clara Forster, usually called Claire by her family,[1] was born on 21 November 1789 in Mainz.[2][3][1][4][a] She was the second daughter of Georg Forster and his wife Therese.[2][3] Her father, who had taken part in the second voyage of James Cook,[9] was the librarian of the University of Mainz.[10] She had an older sister Therese, who was born in 1786.[11] In 1790, her mother and Ludwig Ferdinand Huber, a young Saxon diplomat and writer, became lovers.[12][13] Forster accepted living in a ménage à trois,[14][15] and Huber moved into the house of the Forsters in autumn 1790.[16][17]

The city of Mainz was captured by French revolutionary troops under General Custine in October 1792.[18] This led to the establishment of a Jacobin club and later the Republic of Mainz, in which Georg Forster became an important figure.[19] Her mother then left Mainz for Strasbourg in December 1792, accompanied by her daughters and the Forsters' lodger, Thomas Brand. On the way, they met soldiers who mocked them, but were delighted by Clara greeting them with Bonjour citoyens![20] In January 1793, Therese and the children continued to Neuchâtel. She planned to divorce Forster and marry Huber, and Forster agreed that Clara should live with them after the divorce, unlike her elder sister who was his favourite.[21][22] In November 1793, Georg, who had gone to Paris as representative of the Mainz Republic,[23] managed to come to Travers, where he stayed with his wife and children and Huber for a few days.[24] This was the last time that Claire met her father, who died in Paris on 10 January 1794.[25] On 10 April 1794, her mother and Huber were married.[26][27] The family moved to Bôle near Neuchâtel,[28] and started using French as the family language.[29]

 
Gottlieb von Greyerz, ca. 1805, painting by Georg Volmar

When Huber obtained editorial positions at Johann Friedrich Cotta's Neueste Weltkunde and then the Allgemeine Zeitung in 1798, the family moved to Tübingen and then to Stuttgart.[30][31] Huber met Gottlieb von Greyerz [de], who had obtained a position of head forester in Stoffenried [de] close to Günzburg, and introduced him to his family.[32] In 1804, the Huber family moved to Ulm.[33] The 27-year-old Gottlieb von Greyerz became engaged to 14-year-old Claire; Huber was on a journey to Leipzig and Berlin and consented in a letter.[34] The wedding was supposed to take place two years later.[35] Ludwig Huber died in Ulm on 24 December 1804, leading to the wedding being moved earlier, to spring of 1805.[36] In preparation, her mother sent Claire and her sister Luise to Stuttgart for two months; Claire was supposed to be educated in music, especially in playing the guitar, before getting married.[37]

Married life

 
Castle in Günzburg

Claire and Gottlieb von Greyerz married in Göppingen on 9 May 1805.[37] Claire's mother Therese Huber moved into their Stoffenried house with her children Luise and Victor Aimé and lived with the family until 1816.[38] Gottlieb became senior forester for the Günzburg area in 1806 and moved to official living quarters in the castle in Günzburg in January 1807.[39] From 1810 to 1829, Gottlieb was Royal Bavarian Forest Inspector in Augsburg;[40] the family moved from Günzburg to Augsburg in November 1818.[41] In Augsburg, she became acquainted with Hortense de Beauharnais, the former queen consort of Holland.[6] The von Greyerz children played with and were sometimes educated together with Hortense's son Louis-Napoléon, who later became Napoleon III of France.[5][42] In 1823, Claire's mother also moved to Augsburg, where she died in June 1829.[43] From 1829, Gottlieb worked in Bayreuth.[40] In 1836, during a visit to Switzerland,[42] von Greyerz visited Hortense at her Arenenberg residence and wrote a report about the castle and the life of the Napoleon family.[5] Her report, which has been described both as "somewhat trivial"[5] and as among "the most vivid and detailed descriptions of life at Arenenberg",[44] was published in the Unterhaltungsblatt für und von Frauen in May 1838 and re-published in the Thurgauer Jahrbuch [de] in 1941.[5][45] Claire von Greyerz died in Bayreuth on 3 February 1839.[42][46]

Claire and Gottlieb von Greyerz had ten children, born between 1806 and 1832.[47][48]

  • Maximilian Leon Emil (called Emil, 4 June 1806–9 December 1806),[48] born in Stoffenried[49]
  • Maria Emilie Therese (called Molly, 3 March 1808–15 January 1890), born in Stoffenried[47][50]
  • Walo (1809–8 March 1815), born in Günzburg[47][51]
  • Georg Leo Emil (called Emil, 20 April 1811–11 March 1869), born in Günzburg, later forester in Bern[47][52]
  • Alphons (5 June 1813–4 June 1864), teacher in Bern[47][53]
  • Friedrich Karl Walo (called Walo, 11 October 1815–1904), born in Günzburg, later forester in Lenzburg[47][54]
  • Ludwig Ferdinand Adolph (called Adolf, 1818–2 April 1871), born in Günzburg, forester, died in Interlaken[47][55]
  • Ida Emma Klara (18 March 1820–1913), married A. Halter in Bern[47][55]
  • Otto Aimé (29 November 1829–16 January 1882), born in Bayreuth, parish priest[47]
  • Adeline (13 September 1832–2 February 1896), born in Bayreuth, died in Bern[47]

Papercuts

 
Gottlieb von Greyerz, 1817 papercut by Claire von Greyerz

Von Greyerz was an accomplished papercutting artist. According to a story told by her granddaughter Emilie Billon-Haller, this began when she was given paper and scissors during an illness at age six.[6] The Stuttgart-based papercutting artist Luise Duttenhofer was a family friend who made a silhouette of her mother and may have helped her develop her technique.[6] It is possible they came in contact during one of von Greyerz' visits to Stuttgart between 1803 and 1815, where von Greyerz stayed with Duttenhofer's friend Karl Mayer in 1813.[56] The two women swapped papercuts,[6] and some of the von Greyerz papercuts are now in the collection of the Schiller-Nationalmuseum [de; sk], just like those of Duttenhofer.[57] According to Billon-Haller, the von Greyerz papercuts are poetic, allegoric or romantic and include beautiful landscapes.[6] There are also domestic scenes and antique or mythological themes present in her work,[6] as well as Biblical or Indic motives that she had encountered while reading.[42]

She was featured in the 2017 edition of her hometown's Mainzer Frauenkalender, a calendar featuring women associated with Mainz.[58]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Some sources state she was born in 1790,[5][6] which is incompatible with the birth of her sister Luise in June 1791.[7] Her birthday is also given as 22 November,[7] which is the date of her baptism in the St Emmeran Church [de] in Mainz.[8]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Geiger 1901, p. 56.
  2. ^ a b Uhlig 2004, p. 279.
  3. ^ a b Goldstein 2019, p. 123.
  4. ^ Hoare 1976, p. 271.
  5. ^ a b c d e Schmidt-Liebich 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Fankhauser 2014.
  7. ^ a b Briefe Therese Huber 1, p. 758.
  8. ^ "Clara Forster. Vital. Germany Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898". FamilySearch. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  9. ^ Saine 1972, pp. 20–22.
  10. ^ Saine 1972, p. 59.
  11. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 192.
  12. ^ Saine 1972, p. 101.
  13. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 271.
  14. ^ Saine 1972, p. 126.
  15. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 76.
  16. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 272.
  17. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 72.
  18. ^ Saine 1972, p. 128.
  19. ^ Thomas & Berghof 2000, p. xxi.
  20. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 310.
  21. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 319.
  22. ^ Heuser 2001, p. 112.
  23. ^ Saine 1972, pp. 142–143.
  24. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 338.
  25. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 342.
  26. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 116.
  27. ^ Geiger 1901, p. 91.
  28. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 117.
  29. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 131.
  30. ^ Jordan 1978, pp. 152–155.
  31. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 1, p. 760.
  32. ^ Geiger 1901, pp. 137–139.
  33. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 157.
  34. ^ Jordan 1978, p. 159.
  35. ^ Geiger 1901, pp. 139–140.
  36. ^ Wulbusch 2005, pp. 18–19.
  37. ^ a b Geiger 1901, p. 145.
  38. ^ Wulbusch 2005, pp. 19, 153.
  39. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 2, pp. 838–839.
  40. ^ a b Hürlimann 2006.
  41. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 7, p. 1469.
  42. ^ a b c d von Greyerz 1941, p. 27.
  43. ^ Wulbusch 2005, p. 21.
  44. ^ Gügel 2018, p. 52.
  45. ^ von Greyerz 1941.
  46. ^ "Todes-Anzeige". Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Stuttgart, Augsburg: Cotta. 9 February 1839. p. 305.
  47. ^ a b c d e f g h i j von Greyerz 1884, p. 205.
  48. ^ a b Briefe Therese Huber 2, p. 927.
  49. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 2, pp. 328, 332.
  50. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 4, p. 877.
  51. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 5, pp. 882, 910.
  52. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 4, p. 876.
  53. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 5, p. 880.
  54. ^ Briefe Therese Huber 6, p. 1295.
  55. ^ a b Briefe Therese Huber 7, p. 1516.
  56. ^ Sedda 2010, p. 61.
  57. ^ Sedda 2010, pp. 42, 61.
  58. ^ Stadt Mainz. "33. historischer Mainzer Frauenkalender erschienen". www.mainz.de (in German). Retrieved 11 March 2023.

Sources

  • Fankhauser, Heinz (2014). "Antik, allegorisch und poetisch". Schnittpunkt : Bulletin des Schweizerischen Vereins Freunde des Scherenschnitts = bulletin de l'Association suisse des amis du découpage sur papier (in German and French). OCLC 718636256.
  • Geiger, Ludwig (1901). Therese Huber, 1764 bis 1829 (in German). Stuttgart: Cotta.
  • Goldstein, Jürgen (27 March 2019). Georg Forster: Voyager, Naturalist, Revolutionary. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-47481-6.
  • von Greyerz, Klara (1941). "Ein Besuch in Arenenberg vor hundert Jahren". Thurgauer Jahrbuch (in German). 17: 27–31. doi:10.5169/seals-699629.
  • von Greyerz, Lina (1884). "Emil Georg Leo von Greyerz". Sammlung bernischer Biographien (in German). Bern: J. Dalp'sche Buchhandlung (K. Schmid). pp. 204–212.
  • Gügel, Dominik (2018) [2009]. Labhards Arenenberg. Konstanz: Labhard. ISBN 978-3-939142-44-7. OCLC 699120409 – via issuu.com.
  • Heuser, Magdalene (2001). "Georg und Therese Forster – Aspekte einer gescheiterten Zusammenarbeit". In Plachta, Bodo (ed.). Literarische Zusammenarbeit (in German). Max Niemeyer Verlag. pp. 101–120. doi:10.1515/9783110918472.101. ISBN 978-3-11-091847-2.
  • Hoare, Michael Edward (1976). The Tactless Philosopher: Johann Reinhold Forster (1729-98). Hawthorne Press. ISBN 9780725601218.
  • Huber, Therese (10 December 2020) [1999]. Bergmann-Törner, Corinna; Coleman Brandt, Diane; Harmeyer, Jutta; Heuser, Magdalene; Wulbusch, Petra (eds.). Briefe 1764–1803. Briefe. Vol. 1. doi:10.1515/9783110931952. ISBN 978-3-11-093195-2. OCLC 1226679082.
  • Huber, Therese (31 August 2015) [2003]. Coleman Brandt, Diane; Kewitz, Jessica; Heuser, Magdalene; Kiszio, Andrea; Wulbusch, Petra (eds.). Briefe 1804–Juni 1807. Briefe (in German). Vol. 2. Max Niemeyer Verlag. doi:10.1515/9783110931945. ISBN 978-3-11-093194-5.
  • Huber, Therese (1 July 2015) [2002]. Wulbusch, Petra (ed.). Briefe 1810–1811. Briefe (in German). Vol. 4. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110965865. ISBN 978-3-11-096586-5.
  • Huber, Therese (14 September 2012) [2005]. Heuser, Magdalene; Wulbusch, Petra (eds.). Briefe 1812-Juni 1815. Briefe (in German). Vol. 5. Max Niemeyer Verlag. doi:10.1515/9783110925715. ISBN 978-3-11-092571-5.
  • Huber, Therese (23 December 2011). Heuser, Magdalene; Wulbusch, Petra (eds.). Briefe Juli 1815 bis September 1818. Briefe (in German). Vol. 6. Max Niemeyer Verlag. doi:10.1515/9783110234114. ISBN 978-3-11-023411-4.
  • Huber, Therese (31 July 2013). Stegmann, Jessica (ed.). Briefe Oktober 1818 - 1820. Briefe (in German). Vol. 7. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110289374. ISBN 978-3-11-028937-4.
  • Hürlimann, Katja (24 January 2006). "Greyerz, Gottlieb von". Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz (in German). Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  • Jordan, Sabine Dorothea (1978). Ludwig Ferdinand Huber (1764 - 1804): his life and works. Stuttgart: Akademischer Verlag Heinz. OCLC 721990490.
  • Saine, Thomas P. (1972). Georg Forster. New York, NY: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 0-8057-2316-1.
  • Schmidt-Liebich, Jochen (20 April 2011). "Greyerz, Claire von". Lexikon der Künstlerinnen 1700-1900 (in German). De Gruyter Saur. p. 173. doi:10.1515/9783110951370. ISBN 978-3-11-095137-0.
  • Sedda, Julia (2010). Antikenrezeption und christliche Tradition im Scherenschnittwerk der Luise Duttenhofer (1776-1829) (PhD thesis) (in German). Universität Tübingen.
  • Thomas, Nicholas; Berghof, Oliver (2000). Introduction. A voyage round the world. By Forster, George. Thomas, Nicholas; Berghof, Oliver (eds.). Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. pp. xix–xliii. ISBN 9780824861308. OCLC 70765538.
  • Uhlig, Ludwig (2004). Georg Forster : Lebensabenteuer eines gelehrten Weltbürgers (1754-1794) (in German). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3-525-36731-5.
  • Wulbusch, Petra (2005). Therese Huber und Emil von Herder : zum Geschlechterdiskurs um 1800 (in German). Tübingen: Niemeyer. ISBN 978-3-484-32124-3.

claire, greyerz, clara, greyerz, née, forster, november, 1789, february, 1839, german, papercutting, artist, born, mainz, daughter, world, traveller, georg, forster, wife, therese, father, became, revolutionary, republic, mainz, from, 1792, until, death, 1794,. Clara von Greyerz nee Forster 21 November 1789 3 February 1839 was a German papercutting artist She was born in Mainz the daughter of world traveller Georg Forster and his wife Therese Her father became a revolutionary in the Republic of Mainz from 1792 until his death in 1794 while her mother lived in the Neuchatel area with her lover and eventual husband Ludwig Ferdinand Huber The family moved to Tubingen Stuttgart and Ulm where her stepfather died in December 1804 when she was already engaged to the forester Gottlieb von Greyerz de They married in 1805 living in Stoffenried Gunzburg Augsburg and Bayreuth and had ten children between 1806 and 1832 In Augsburg von Greyerz became acquainted with Hortense de Beauharnais and her children played with Hortense s son the future Napoleon III of France Von Greyerz was known for her papercuts some of which she swapped with fellow artist Luise Duttenhofer In 1836 she visited Hortense at Arenenberg and published a report of her experiences there Clara Forster in 1805 painted by Ludovike Simanowiz Contents 1 Early life 2 Married life 3 Papercuts 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 Citations 4 3 SourcesEarly life EditClara Forster usually called Claire by her family 1 was born on 21 November 1789 in Mainz 2 3 1 4 a She was the second daughter of Georg Forster and his wife Therese 2 3 Her father who had taken part in the second voyage of James Cook 9 was the librarian of the University of Mainz 10 She had an older sister Therese who was born in 1786 11 In 1790 her mother and Ludwig Ferdinand Huber a young Saxon diplomat and writer became lovers 12 13 Forster accepted living in a menage a trois 14 15 and Huber moved into the house of the Forsters in autumn 1790 16 17 The city of Mainz was captured by French revolutionary troops under General Custine in October 1792 18 This led to the establishment of a Jacobin club and later the Republic of Mainz in which Georg Forster became an important figure 19 Her mother then left Mainz for Strasbourg in December 1792 accompanied by her daughters and the Forsters lodger Thomas Brand On the way they met soldiers who mocked them but were delighted by Clara greeting them with Bonjour citoyens 20 In January 1793 Therese and the children continued to Neuchatel She planned to divorce Forster and marry Huber and Forster agreed that Clara should live with them after the divorce unlike her elder sister who was his favourite 21 22 In November 1793 Georg who had gone to Paris as representative of the Mainz Republic 23 managed to come to Travers where he stayed with his wife and children and Huber for a few days 24 This was the last time that Claire met her father who died in Paris on 10 January 1794 25 On 10 April 1794 her mother and Huber were married 26 27 The family moved to Bole near Neuchatel 28 and started using French as the family language 29 Gottlieb von Greyerz ca 1805 painting by Georg Volmar When Huber obtained editorial positions at Johann Friedrich Cotta s Neueste Weltkunde and then the Allgemeine Zeitung in 1798 the family moved to Tubingen and then to Stuttgart 30 31 Huber met Gottlieb von Greyerz de who had obtained a position of head forester in Stoffenried de close to Gunzburg and introduced him to his family 32 In 1804 the Huber family moved to Ulm 33 The 27 year old Gottlieb von Greyerz became engaged to 14 year old Claire Huber was on a journey to Leipzig and Berlin and consented in a letter 34 The wedding was supposed to take place two years later 35 Ludwig Huber died in Ulm on 24 December 1804 leading to the wedding being moved earlier to spring of 1805 36 In preparation her mother sent Claire and her sister Luise to Stuttgart for two months Claire was supposed to be educated in music especially in playing the guitar before getting married 37 Married life Edit Castle in Gunzburg Claire and Gottlieb von Greyerz married in Goppingen on 9 May 1805 37 Claire s mother Therese Huber moved into their Stoffenried house with her children Luise and Victor Aime and lived with the family until 1816 38 Gottlieb became senior forester for the Gunzburg area in 1806 and moved to official living quarters in the castle in Gunzburg in January 1807 39 From 1810 to 1829 Gottlieb was Royal Bavarian Forest Inspector in Augsburg 40 the family moved from Gunzburg to Augsburg in November 1818 41 In Augsburg she became acquainted with Hortense de Beauharnais the former queen consort of Holland 6 The von Greyerz children played with and were sometimes educated together with Hortense s son Louis Napoleon who later became Napoleon III of France 5 42 In 1823 Claire s mother also moved to Augsburg where she died in June 1829 43 From 1829 Gottlieb worked in Bayreuth 40 In 1836 during a visit to Switzerland 42 von Greyerz visited Hortense at her Arenenberg residence and wrote a report about the castle and the life of the Napoleon family 5 Her report which has been described both as somewhat trivial 5 and as among the most vivid and detailed descriptions of life at Arenenberg 44 was published in the Unterhaltungsblatt fur und von Frauen in May 1838 and re published in the Thurgauer Jahrbuch de in 1941 5 45 Claire von Greyerz died in Bayreuth on 3 February 1839 42 46 Claire and Gottlieb von Greyerz had ten children born between 1806 and 1832 47 48 Maximilian Leon Emil called Emil 4 June 1806 9 December 1806 48 born in Stoffenried 49 Maria Emilie Therese called Molly 3 March 1808 15 January 1890 born in Stoffenried 47 50 Walo 1809 8 March 1815 born in Gunzburg 47 51 Georg Leo Emil called Emil 20 April 1811 11 March 1869 born in Gunzburg later forester in Bern 47 52 Alphons 5 June 1813 4 June 1864 teacher in Bern 47 53 Friedrich Karl Walo called Walo 11 October 1815 1904 born in Gunzburg later forester in Lenzburg 47 54 Ludwig Ferdinand Adolph called Adolf 1818 2 April 1871 born in Gunzburg forester died in Interlaken 47 55 Ida Emma Klara 18 March 1820 1913 married A Halter in Bern 47 55 Otto Aime 29 November 1829 16 January 1882 born in Bayreuth parish priest 47 Adeline 13 September 1832 2 February 1896 born in Bayreuth died in Bern 47 Papercuts Edit Gottlieb von Greyerz 1817 papercut by Claire von Greyerz Von Greyerz was an accomplished papercutting artist According to a story told by her granddaughter Emilie Billon Haller this began when she was given paper and scissors during an illness at age six 6 The Stuttgart based papercutting artist Luise Duttenhofer was a family friend who made a silhouette of her mother and may have helped her develop her technique 6 It is possible they came in contact during one of von Greyerz visits to Stuttgart between 1803 and 1815 where von Greyerz stayed with Duttenhofer s friend Karl Mayer in 1813 56 The two women swapped papercuts 6 and some of the von Greyerz papercuts are now in the collection of the Schiller Nationalmuseum de sk just like those of Duttenhofer 57 According to Billon Haller the von Greyerz papercuts are poetic allegoric or romantic and include beautiful landscapes 6 There are also domestic scenes and antique or mythological themes present in her work 6 as well as Biblical or Indic motives that she had encountered while reading 42 She was featured in the 2017 edition of her hometown s Mainzer Frauenkalender a calendar featuring women associated with Mainz 58 References EditFootnotes Edit Some sources state she was born in 1790 5 6 which is incompatible with the birth of her sister Luise in June 1791 7 Her birthday is also given as 22 November 7 which is the date of her baptism in the St Emmeran Church de in Mainz 8 Citations Edit a b Geiger 1901 p 56 a b Uhlig 2004 p 279 a b Goldstein 2019 p 123 Hoare 1976 p 271 a b c d e Schmidt Liebich 2011 a b c d e f g Fankhauser 2014 a b Briefe Therese Huber 1 p 758 Clara Forster Vital Germany Births and Baptisms 1558 1898 FamilySearch Retrieved 16 March 2023 Saine 1972 pp 20 22 Saine 1972 p 59 Uhlig 2004 p 192 Saine 1972 p 101 Uhlig 2004 p 271 Saine 1972 p 126 Jordan 1978 p 76 Uhlig 2004 p 272 Jordan 1978 p 72 Saine 1972 p 128 Thomas amp Berghof 2000 p xxi Uhlig 2004 p 310 Uhlig 2004 p 319 Heuser 2001 p 112 Saine 1972 pp 142 143 Uhlig 2004 p 338 Uhlig 2004 p 342 Jordan 1978 p 116 Geiger 1901 p 91 Jordan 1978 p 117 Jordan 1978 p 131 Jordan 1978 pp 152 155 Briefe Therese Huber 1 p 760 Geiger 1901 pp 137 139 Jordan 1978 p 157 Jordan 1978 p 159 Geiger 1901 pp 139 140 Wulbusch 2005 pp 18 19 a b Geiger 1901 p 145 Wulbusch 2005 pp 19 153 Briefe Therese Huber 2 pp 838 839 a b Hurlimann 2006 Briefe Therese Huber 7 p 1469 a b c d von Greyerz 1941 p 27 Wulbusch 2005 p 21 Gugel 2018 p 52 von Greyerz 1941 Todes Anzeige Allgemeine Zeitung in German Stuttgart Augsburg Cotta 9 February 1839 p 305 a b c d e f g h i j von Greyerz 1884 p 205 a b Briefe Therese Huber 2 p 927 Briefe Therese Huber 2 pp 328 332 Briefe Therese Huber 4 p 877 Briefe Therese Huber 5 pp 882 910 Briefe Therese Huber 4 p 876 Briefe Therese Huber 5 p 880 Briefe Therese Huber 6 p 1295 a b Briefe Therese Huber 7 p 1516 Sedda 2010 p 61 Sedda 2010 pp 42 61 Stadt Mainz 33 historischer Mainzer Frauenkalender erschienen www mainz de in German Retrieved 11 March 2023 Sources Edit Fankhauser Heinz 2014 Antik allegorisch und poetisch Schnittpunkt Bulletin des Schweizerischen Vereins Freunde des Scherenschnitts bulletin de l Association suisse des amis du decoupage sur papier in German and French OCLC 718636256 Geiger Ludwig 1901 Therese Huber 1764 bis 1829 in German Stuttgart Cotta Goldstein Jurgen 27 March 2019 Georg Forster Voyager Naturalist Revolutionary University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47481 6 von Greyerz Klara 1941 Ein Besuch in Arenenberg vor hundert Jahren Thurgauer Jahrbuch in German 17 27 31 doi 10 5169 seals 699629 von Greyerz Lina 1884 Emil Georg Leo von Greyerz Sammlung bernischer Biographien in German Bern J Dalp sche Buchhandlung K Schmid pp 204 212 Gugel Dominik 2018 2009 Labhards Arenenberg Konstanz Labhard ISBN 978 3 939142 44 7 OCLC 699120409 via issuu com Heuser Magdalene 2001 Georg und Therese Forster Aspekte einer gescheiterten Zusammenarbeit In Plachta Bodo ed Literarische Zusammenarbeit in German Max Niemeyer Verlag pp 101 120 doi 10 1515 9783110918472 101 ISBN 978 3 11 091847 2 Hoare Michael Edward 1976 The Tactless Philosopher Johann Reinhold Forster 1729 98 Hawthorne Press ISBN 9780725601218 Huber Therese 10 December 2020 1999 Bergmann Torner Corinna Coleman Brandt Diane Harmeyer Jutta Heuser Magdalene Wulbusch Petra eds Briefe 1764 1803 Briefe Vol 1 doi 10 1515 9783110931952 ISBN 978 3 11 093195 2 OCLC 1226679082 Huber Therese 31 August 2015 2003 Coleman Brandt Diane Kewitz Jessica Heuser Magdalene Kiszio Andrea Wulbusch Petra eds Briefe 1804 Juni 1807 Briefe in German Vol 2 Max Niemeyer Verlag doi 10 1515 9783110931945 ISBN 978 3 11 093194 5 Huber Therese 1 July 2015 2002 Wulbusch Petra ed Briefe 1810 1811 Briefe in German Vol 4 De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110965865 ISBN 978 3 11 096586 5 Huber Therese 14 September 2012 2005 Heuser Magdalene Wulbusch Petra eds Briefe 1812 Juni 1815 Briefe in German Vol 5 Max Niemeyer Verlag doi 10 1515 9783110925715 ISBN 978 3 11 092571 5 Huber Therese 23 December 2011 Heuser Magdalene Wulbusch Petra eds Briefe Juli 1815 bis September 1818 Briefe in German Vol 6 Max Niemeyer Verlag doi 10 1515 9783110234114 ISBN 978 3 11 023411 4 Huber Therese 31 July 2013 Stegmann Jessica ed Briefe Oktober 1818 1820 Briefe in German Vol 7 De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110289374 ISBN 978 3 11 028937 4 Hurlimann Katja 24 January 2006 Greyerz Gottlieb von Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz in German Retrieved 16 March 2023 Jordan Sabine Dorothea 1978 Ludwig Ferdinand Huber 1764 1804 his life and works Stuttgart Akademischer Verlag Heinz OCLC 721990490 Saine Thomas P 1972 Georg Forster New York NY Twayne Publishers ISBN 0 8057 2316 1 Schmidt Liebich Jochen 20 April 2011 Greyerz Claire von Lexikon der Kunstlerinnen 1700 1900 in German De Gruyter Saur p 173 doi 10 1515 9783110951370 ISBN 978 3 11 095137 0 Sedda Julia 2010 Antikenrezeption und christliche Tradition im Scherenschnittwerk der Luise Duttenhofer 1776 1829 PhD thesis in German Universitat Tubingen Thomas Nicholas Berghof Oliver 2000 Introduction A voyage round the world By Forster George Thomas Nicholas Berghof Oliver eds Honolulu University of Hawai i Press pp xix xliii ISBN 9780824861308 OCLC 70765538 Uhlig Ludwig 2004 Georg Forster Lebensabenteuer eines gelehrten Weltburgers 1754 1794 in German Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 525 36731 5 Wulbusch Petra 2005 Therese Huber und Emil von Herder zum Geschlechterdiskurs um 1800 in German Tubingen Niemeyer ISBN 978 3 484 32124 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claire von Greyerz amp oldid 1148266983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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