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Ida Friederike Görres

Ida Friederike Görres (2 December 1901, in Schloss Ronsperg, Bohemia – 15 May 1971, in Frankfurt am Main), born Elisabeth Friederike, Reichsgräfin von Coudenhove-Kalergi, was a Catholic writer. From the Coudenhove-Kalergi family, she was the daughter, one of seven children, of Count Heinrich von Coudenhove-Kalergi and his Japanese wife Mitsuko Aoyama.

Ida Friederike Görres
Born2 December 1901
Ronsperg, Bohemia
Died15 May 1971
Frankfurt, Germany
Resting placeBergäcker Friedhof, Freiburg, Germany
OccupationWriter
Notable workThe Nature of Sanctity: A Dialogue, The Hidden Face: A Study of St. Thérèse of Lisieux
SpouseCarl-Josef Görres
Main interests
Catholicism, sanctity, saints
Websiteidagoerres.org

Biography

Early life

Ida Friederike Görres was born on December 2, 1901 in western Bohemia on her family’s estate in Ronsperg (today called Poběžovice), where she grew up.[1] She was the sixth of seven children, and her siblings included Richard Nikolaus Graf von Coudenhove-Kalergi, Gerolf Joseph Benedikt Maria Valentin Franz Coudenhove-Kalergi, and Elisabeth Maria Anna Coudenhove-Kalergi.[2] Görres grew up going to Austrian covenant schools, and in 1923 she entered a novitiate at the Mary Ward Institute in St. Pölten near Vienna.

Education and Work

Görres went on to attend school at the College of the Sacred Heart in Pressbaum. She began an apprenticeship there around age 20 but left the convent in 1925. After that, she studied political science in Vienna from 1925 to 1927, and then other topics such as the social sciences, history, church history, theology and philosophy from 1927 to 1929 in Freiburg.[1]

She became involved in the German Catholic Youth Movement in around 1925, acting as the federal leader of the girls and writing articles for the magazine Die Schildgenossen.[3] Together with Walter Dirks and Ludwig Neundörfer, she headed the "Oktoberkreis" founded in 1930. Then in 1931, she went to Dresden as a youth secretary for girls' pastoral care and worked there at the Catholic Educational Institute. In the spring of 1934 she became diocesan secretary at the ordinariate of the Diocese of Meissen.

Around this time, Ida Görres met engineer Carl-Josef Görres (1903-1973), who was the older brother of Catholic psychologist Albert Görres and brother-in-law of Silvia Görres. On Easter day (21 April) 1935, Ida and Carl-Josef got married at the Oratory in Leipzig. Some time after the ceremony, the couple moved to Stuttgart-Degerloch. Through his work as an engineer and business consultant, Carl-Josef Görres made it possible for Ida to have the opportunity to work as a writer and theologian.[1]

Görres was active as a writer and wrote on various topics on hagiography, stressing the importance of the "humanness of saints." During the last three or four years of World War II, her books were not allowed to be sold in Germany.[1] After the war was over, she continued to write, travel, and lecture, until in 1950 a breakdown in health drove her into seclusion. Her frank 1946 "Letter on the Church"[4] unleashed significant controversy, though it is now viewed in hindsight as prescient.[5] Her collection of personal writings, Broken Lights, Diaries and Letters 1951-1959, documents her work from this time.[3]

She was loyal to the tradition of Catholic Christianity: "I have known no other father but these fathers, the priests of the Church, no brothers but my own dear brothers, the theology students," she said. "No mother but the Church...I loved them all and clung to them, not only as a daughter and sister, but as a Japanese daughter and sister, in the intensity of unconditional submission which belongs to Japanese filial piety."[6]

Friendships

Görres's friends included Werner Bergengruen, Maria Birgitta zu Münster, OSB, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Walter Nigg, Alfons Rosenberg, and Gustav Siewerth.[7] Also, Görres influenced and was friends with Church historian and Catholic intellectual Donald Nicholl.[8]

Death

Görres participated in the Würzburg synod and died a day after collapsing at a synod meeting in Frankfurt.[9] At the Requiem held in Freiburg Cathedral, the eulogy was delivered by Fr. Joseph Ratzinger,[10] who later became Pope Benedict XVI.

Works

 
The cover of the reissue of The Hidden Face (Ignatius Press, 2003) (translated by Richard and Clara Winston)

Books translated into English

Quartet: The Christian Life

 
The four-part series on The Christian Life by Ida Görres. From 1950 edition of Von der Last Gottes (The Burden of Belief).

Her first three books translated into English in the 1930s are part of a series of four books Görres published about key aspects of Catholic life and the Catholic faith. Part one is The Nature of Sanctity.[11] Part two is The Burden of Belief on the Catholic faith in the modern world. The Nature of Sanctity and The Burden of Belief are both written in the form of a dialogue. Part three, The Cloister and the World, is about discerning one’s vocation in life;[12] Görres wrote this one in the form of fictional letters to young women. The fourth book in this series, on the nature of mercy, has not yet been translated into English.[13]

Essays translated into English

  • "Laywoman's View of Priestly Celibacy" (1966)
  • “A Letter on the Church” (Dublin Review, 1949, translated by Ida Friederike Görres)
  • "Of the Homelessness of God" (1949)
  • “St. Joan” (1949)[14] (initially published as “The Saint Who Took the World Seriously” in The Cloister and the World)[15]
  • "Trusting the Church: A Lecture" [16] (1970, translated by Jennifer S. Bryson) (also available as audio recording by Karina Majewski)
  • "When Does a Person Have a Capacity for Liturgy?"[17] (1966, translated by Jennifer S. Bryson)
  • "The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset (1930),"[18] (translated by Jennifer S. Bryson)
  • “Satanic,” “An Atheistic Doctrine of Woman”: A Review of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex (1951) (translated by Jan C. Bentz and Jennifer Sue Bryson).[19]
  • "Women in Holy Orders?” (UK) / “Women As Priests? This Woman Says 'No.'” (USA) (1965)

Books in German (partial list)

  • Gespräch über die Heiligkeit (1931)
  • Von Ehe und von Einsamkeit (1949)
  • Der Geopferte: ein anderer Blick auf John Henry Newman, edited by Hanna-Barbara Gerl-Falkovitz (2011, published posthumously)
  • Im Winter wächst das Brot (1970)
  • Die leibhaftige Kirche (1950)
  • Das Verborgene Antlitz: Eine Studie über Therese von Lisieux (1944)
  • Was Ehe auf immer bindet (1971)
  • “Wirklich die neue Phönixgestalt?” Über Kirche und Konzil; Unbekannte Briefe 1962-1971 von Ida Friederike Görres an Paulus Gordan, edited by Hanna-Barbara Gerl-Falkovitz (2015)

Legacy

Görres is best known in the English speaking world for her 1944 study of Thérèse of Lisieux Das Verborgene Antlitz - translated as The Hidden Face. The British cookery writer and celebrity chef Delia Smith named the book as an influence on her Roman Catholicism.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hoehn, Matthew (1948). Catholic authors : contemporary biographical sketches. Internet Archive. Newark, N. J. : St. Mary's Abbey.
  2. ^ Familie Coudenhove Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Paneuropa Deutschland - Paneuropa-Union.
  3. ^ a b Broken Lights Diaries and Letters of Ida Gorres, page vi Introduction by Alan Pryce-Jones.[1]
  4. ^ Görres, Ida Friederike (1946). "Brief über die Kirche". Frankfurter Hefte. 1: 715–733.
  5. ^ Seewald, Peter (2020). Benedict XVI: A Life: Volume One: Youth in Nazi Germany to the Second Vatican Council 1927–1965. Trans. Dinah Livingstone. London: Bloomsbury. p. 326.
  6. ^ Görres, Broken Lights (Burns & Oates, 1964), 145.[2]
  7. ^ Rosenberg, Alfons, ed. Wanderwege. Festschrift Zum 60. Geburtstag von Ida Friederike Görres. Zürich, Switzerland; München; Paderborn, Germany: Thomas Verlag, 1961. This book includes contributions from these and other friends of Ida Görres.
  8. ^ a b Hastings, Adrian (May 6, 1997). "Obituary: Professor Donald Nicholl". The Independent.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Gerl-Falkovitz, Hanna-Barbara (2020). ""Only the Lover Discerns": A Brief Introduction to Ida Friederike Görres". Logos (Translated by Jennifer S. Bryson). 23:4: 117–122.
  10. ^ Ratzinger, Joseph (2020). "Eulogy for Ida Friederike Görres". Logos (Translated by Jennifer S. Bryson). 23:4: 148–151.
  11. ^ Coudenhove, Ida Friederike. “The Nature of Sanctity: A Dialogue.” In Essays on Religion and Culture, edited by T. F. Burns Christopher Dawson, translated by Ruth Bonsall And Edward Watkin, 1:125–96. The Persistence of Order. Providence, RI: Cluny Media, 2019.
  12. ^ Coudenhove, Ida Friederike. The Cloister and the World. Translated by Harriette Eleanor Kennedy. London, U.K.: Sheed & Ward, 1935.
  13. ^ Görres, Ida Friederike. Das Andern Last: Ein Gespräch über die Barmherzigkeit. Freiburg, Germany: Verlag Herder, 1940.
  14. ^ Coudenhove, Ida. “St. Joan.” In Saints Are Not Sad: Forty Biographical Portraits, edited by Frank Sheed, translated by Harriette Eleanor Kennedy, 257–69. New York: Sheed & Ward, 1949.
  15. ^ Coudenhove, “The Saint Who Took the World Seriously,” in The Cloister and the World, 91–110.
  16. ^ Görres, Ida Friederike. “Trusting the Church: A Lecture.” Translated by Jennifer S. Bryson. Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture  23, no. 4 (September 9, 2020): 123–47.
  17. ^ Görres, Ida Friederike. “When Does a Person Have a Capacity for Liturgy?” Translated by Jennifer S. Bryson. Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25, no. 3 (Summer 2022): 126–39.
  18. ^ (Görres), Ida Coudenhove. “The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset (1930).” Translated by Jennifer Sue Bryson. Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25, no. 4 (2022): 142–55. See also Bryson, Jennifer Sue. “Translator’s Introduction: The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset (1930) by Ida Coudenhove (Görres).” Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25, no. 4 (2022): 140–41.
  19. ^ Görres, Ida Friederike (2023). Translated by Jan C. Bentz and Jennifer Sue Bryson. ""Satanic," "An Atheistic Doctrine of Woman": A Review of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex (1951)". Interpretation. 49 (3): 411–422.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Ida Friederike Görres at Wikiquote
  • Website about Ida Friederike Görres

friederike, görres, december, 1901, schloss, ronsperg, bohemia, 1971, frankfurt, main, born, elisabeth, friederike, reichsgräfin, coudenhove, kalergi, catholic, writer, from, coudenhove, kalergi, family, daughter, seven, children, count, heinrich, coudenhove, . Ida Friederike Gorres 2 December 1901 in Schloss Ronsperg Bohemia 15 May 1971 in Frankfurt am Main born Elisabeth Friederike Reichsgrafin von Coudenhove Kalergi was a Catholic writer From the Coudenhove Kalergi family she was the daughter one of seven children of Count Heinrich von Coudenhove Kalergi and his Japanese wife Mitsuko Aoyama Ida Friederike GorresBorn2 December 1901Ronsperg BohemiaDied15 May 1971Frankfurt GermanyResting placeBergacker Friedhof Freiburg GermanyOccupationWriterNotable workThe Nature of Sanctity A Dialogue The Hidden Face A Study of St Therese of LisieuxSpouseCarl Josef GorresMain interestsCatholicism sanctity saintsWebsiteidagoerres org Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education and Work 1 3 Friendships 1 4 Death 2 Works 2 1 Books translated into English 2 2 Quartet The Christian Life 2 3 Essays translated into English 2 4 Books in German partial list 3 Legacy 4 References 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Ida Friederike Gorres was born on December 2 1901 in western Bohemia on her family s estate in Ronsperg today called Pobezovice where she grew up 1 She was the sixth of seven children and her siblings included Richard Nikolaus Graf von Coudenhove Kalergi Gerolf Joseph Benedikt Maria Valentin Franz Coudenhove Kalergi and Elisabeth Maria Anna Coudenhove Kalergi 2 Gorres grew up going to Austrian covenant schools and in 1923 she entered a novitiate at the Mary Ward Institute in St Polten near Vienna Education and Work Edit Gorres went on to attend school at the College of the Sacred Heart in Pressbaum She began an apprenticeship there around age 20 but left the convent in 1925 After that she studied political science in Vienna from 1925 to 1927 and then other topics such as the social sciences history church history theology and philosophy from 1927 to 1929 in Freiburg 1 She became involved in the German Catholic Youth Movement in around 1925 acting as the federal leader of the girls and writing articles for the magazine Die Schildgenossen 3 Together with Walter Dirks and Ludwig Neundorfer she headed the Oktoberkreis founded in 1930 Then in 1931 she went to Dresden as a youth secretary for girls pastoral care and worked there at the Catholic Educational Institute In the spring of 1934 she became diocesan secretary at the ordinariate of the Diocese of Meissen Around this time Ida Gorres met engineer Carl Josef Gorres 1903 1973 who was the older brother of Catholic psychologist Albert Gorres and brother in law of Silvia Gorres On Easter day 21 April 1935 Ida and Carl Josef got married at the Oratory in Leipzig Some time after the ceremony the couple moved to Stuttgart Degerloch Through his work as an engineer and business consultant Carl Josef Gorres made it possible for Ida to have the opportunity to work as a writer and theologian 1 Gorres was active as a writer and wrote on various topics on hagiography stressing the importance of the humanness of saints During the last three or four years of World War II her books were not allowed to be sold in Germany 1 After the war was over she continued to write travel and lecture until in 1950 a breakdown in health drove her into seclusion Her frank 1946 Letter on the Church 4 unleashed significant controversy though it is now viewed in hindsight as prescient 5 Her collection of personal writings Broken Lights Diaries and Letters 1951 1959 documents her work from this time 3 She was loyal to the tradition of Catholic Christianity I have known no other father but these fathers the priests of the Church no brothers but my own dear brothers the theology students she said No mother but the Church I loved them all and clung to them not only as a daughter and sister but as a Japanese daughter and sister in the intensity of unconditional submission which belongs to Japanese filial piety 6 Friendships Edit Gorres s friends included Werner Bergengruen Maria Birgitta zu Munster OSB Erik von Kuehnelt Leddihn Walter Nigg Alfons Rosenberg and Gustav Siewerth 7 Also Gorres influenced and was friends with Church historian and Catholic intellectual Donald Nicholl 8 Death Edit Gorres participated in the Wurzburg synod and died a day after collapsing at a synod meeting in Frankfurt 9 At the Requiem held in Freiburg Cathedral the eulogy was delivered by Fr Joseph Ratzinger 10 who later became Pope Benedict XVI Works Edit The cover of the reissue of The Hidden Face Ignatius Press 2003 translated by Richard and Clara Winston Books translated into English Edit The Nature of Sanctity A Dialogue 1932 The Burden of Belief 1934 The Cloister and the World 1935 3 Mary Ward 1939 4 The Hidden Face A Study of St Therese of Lisieux 1959 Broken Lights Diaries and Letters 1951 1959 1964 5 Is Celibacy Outdated 1965 Quartet The Christian Life Edit The four part series on The Christian Life by Ida Gorres From 1950 edition of Von der Last Gottes The Burden of Belief Her first three books translated into English in the 1930s are part of a series of four books Gorres published about key aspects of Catholic life and the Catholic faith Part one is The Nature of Sanctity 11 Part two is The Burden of Belief on the Catholic faith in the modern world The Nature of Sanctity and The Burden of Belief are both written in the form of a dialogue Part three The Cloister and the World is about discerning one s vocation in life 12 Gorres wrote this one in the form of fictional letters to young women The fourth book in this series on the nature of mercy has not yet been translated into English 13 Essays translated into English Edit Laywoman s View of Priestly Celibacy 1966 A Letter on the Church Dublin Review 1949 translated by Ida Friederike Gorres Of the Homelessness of God 1949 St Joan 1949 14 initially published as The Saint Who Took the World Seriously in The Cloister and the World 15 Trusting the Church A Lecture 16 1970 translated by Jennifer S Bryson also available as audio recording by Karina Majewski When Does a Person Have a Capacity for Liturgy 17 1966 translated by Jennifer S Bryson The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset 1930 18 translated by Jennifer S Bryson Satanic An Atheistic Doctrine of Woman A Review of Simone de Beauvoir s The Second Sex 1951 translated by Jan C Bentz and Jennifer Sue Bryson 19 Women in Holy Orders UK Women As Priests This Woman Says No USA 1965 Books in German partial list Edit Gesprach uber die Heiligkeit 1931 Von Ehe und von Einsamkeit 1949 Der Geopferte ein anderer Blick auf John Henry Newman edited by Hanna Barbara Gerl Falkovitz 2011 published posthumously Im Winter wachst das Brot 1970 Die leibhaftige Kirche 1950 Das Verborgene Antlitz Eine Studie uber Therese von Lisieux 1944 Was Ehe auf immer bindet 1971 Wirklich die neue Phonixgestalt Uber Kirche und Konzil Unbekannte Briefe 1962 1971 von Ida Friederike Gorres an Paulus Gordan edited by Hanna Barbara Gerl Falkovitz 2015 Legacy EditGorres is best known in the English speaking world for her 1944 study of Therese of Lisieux Das Verborgene Antlitz translated as The Hidden Face The British cookery writer and celebrity chef Delia Smith named the book as an influence on her Roman Catholicism 8 References Edit a b c d Hoehn Matthew 1948 Catholic authors contemporary biographical sketches Internet Archive Newark N J St Mary s Abbey Familie Coudenhove Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Paneuropa Deutschland Paneuropa Union a b Broken Lights Diaries and Letters of Ida Gorres page vi Introduction by Alan Pryce Jones 1 Gorres Ida Friederike 1946 Brief uber die Kirche Frankfurter Hefte 1 715 733 Seewald Peter 2020 Benedict XVI A Life Volume One Youth in Nazi Germany to the Second Vatican Council 1927 1965 Trans Dinah Livingstone London Bloomsbury p 326 Gorres Broken Lights Burns amp Oates 1964 145 2 Rosenberg Alfons ed Wanderwege Festschrift Zum 60 Geburtstag von Ida Friederike Gorres Zurich Switzerland Munchen Paderborn Germany Thomas Verlag 1961 This book includes contributions from these and other friends of Ida Gorres a b Hastings Adrian May 6 1997 Obituary Professor Donald Nicholl The Independent a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Gerl Falkovitz Hanna Barbara 2020 Only the Lover Discerns A Brief Introduction to Ida Friederike Gorres Logos Translated by Jennifer S Bryson 23 4 117 122 Ratzinger Joseph 2020 Eulogy for Ida Friederike Gorres Logos Translated by Jennifer S Bryson 23 4 148 151 Coudenhove Ida Friederike The Nature of Sanctity A Dialogue In Essays on Religion and Culture edited by T F Burns Christopher Dawson translated by Ruth Bonsall And Edward Watkin 1 125 96 The Persistence of Order Providence RI Cluny Media 2019 Coudenhove Ida Friederike The Cloister and the World Translated by Harriette Eleanor Kennedy London U K Sheed amp Ward 1935 Gorres Ida Friederike Das Andern Last Ein Gesprach uber die Barmherzigkeit Freiburg Germany Verlag Herder 1940 Coudenhove Ida St Joan In Saints Are Not Sad Forty Biographical Portraits edited by Frank Sheed translated by Harriette Eleanor Kennedy 257 69 New York Sheed amp Ward 1949 Coudenhove The Saint Who Took the World Seriously in The Cloister and the World 91 110 Gorres Ida Friederike Trusting the Church A Lecture Translated by Jennifer S Bryson Logos A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 23 no 4 September 9 2020 123 47 Gorres Ida Friederike When Does a Person Have a Capacity for Liturgy Translated by Jennifer S Bryson Logos A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25 no 3 Summer 2022 126 39 Gorres Ida Coudenhove The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset 1930 Translated by Jennifer Sue Bryson Logos A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25 no 4 2022 142 55 See also Bryson Jennifer Sue Translator s Introduction The Wild Orchid and Christendom in the Novels of Sigrid Undset 1930 by Ida Coudenhove Gorres Logos A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 25 no 4 2022 140 41 Gorres Ida Friederike 2023 Translated by Jan C Bentz and Jennifer Sue Bryson Satanic An Atheistic Doctrine of Woman A Review of Simone de Beauvoir s The Second Sex 1951 Interpretation 49 3 411 422 External links Edit Quotations related to Ida Friederike Gorres at Wikiquote Website about Ida Friederike Gorres Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ida Friederike Gorres amp oldid 1169009848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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