fbpx
Wikipedia

Mileva Marić

Mileva Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић; 19 December 1875 – 4 August 1948), sometimes called Mileva Marić-Einstein (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић-Ајнштајн, romanizedMileva Marić-Ajnštajn), was a Serbian physicist and mathematician and the first wife of Albert Einstein from 1903 to 1919. She was the only woman among Einstein's fellow students at Zürich Polytechnic and was the second woman to finish a full program of study at the Department of Mathematics and Physics.[1] Marić and Einstein were collaborators and lovers and had a daughter Lieserl in 1902, who likely died of scarlet fever at one and a half years old. They later had two sons, Hans Albert and Eduard.

Mileva Marić
Милева Марић
Marić in 1896
Born
Mileva Marić

(1875-12-19)19 December 1875
Died4 August 1948(1948-08-04) (aged 72)
Zürich, Switzerland
Resting placeFriedhof Nordheim, Zürich
NationalitySerbian
Other names
  • Mileva Marić-Einstein
  • Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn
Alma mater
OccupationMathematician
Spouse
(m. 1903; div. 1919)
Children

They separated in 1914, with Marić taking the boys and returning to Zürich from Berlin. They divorced in 1919. When Einstein received the Nobel Prize in 1921, he transferred the money to Marić, chiefly to support their sons; she had access to the interest. In 1930, their second son Eduard had a breakdown at about age 20 and was diagnosed with schizophrenia. It is unknown to what extent Marić contributed to Albert Einstein's early work, and to the Annus Mirabilis Papers in particular.

Biography

On 19 December 1875, Mileva Marić was born into a wealthy family in Titel in Austria-Hungary (today Serbia) as the eldest of three children of Miloš Marić (1846–1922) and Marija Ružić-Marić (1847–1935).[2] Shortly after her birth, her father ended his military career and took a job at the court in Ruma and later in Zagreb.

She began her secondary education in 1886 at a high school for girls in Novi Sad, but changed the following year to a high school in Sremska Mitrovica.[3] Beginning in 1890, Marić attended the Royal Serbian Grammar School in Šabac. In 1891, her father obtained special permission to enroll Marić as a private student at the all-male Royal Classical High School in Zagreb.[3] Her mathematics teacher was Vladimir Varićak.[4] She passed the entrance exam and entered the tenth grade in 1892. She won special permission to attend physics lectures in February 1894 and passed the final exams in September 1894. Her highest grades were in mathematics and physics, both "very good", one grade below the highest "excellent".[5] That year she fell seriously ill and decided to move to Switzerland, where on 14 November, she started at the "Girls High School" in Zurich. In 1896, she passed her Matura-Exam, and started studying medicine at the University of Zurich for one semester.[3]

In the fall of 1896, Marić switched to the Zurich Polytechnic (later Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, ETH), having passed the mathematics entrance examination with an average grade of 4.25 (scale 1–6).[6] She enrolled for the diploma course to teach physics and mathematics in secondary schools (section VIA) at the same time as Albert Einstein. She was the only woman in her group of six students, and the fifth woman to enter that section. She would have had to have been extraordinarily talented to overcome the restrictions on the admission of women.[3][6][7] She and Einstein became close friends quite soon. In October, Marić went to Heidelberg to study at Heidelberg University for the winter semester 1897/98, attending physics and mathematics lectures as an auditor. She rejoined the Zurich Polytechnic in April 1898,[3] where her studies included the following courses: differential and integral calculus, descriptive and projective geometry, mechanics, theoretical physics, applied physics, experimental physics, and astronomy.[6]

She sat for the intermediate diploma examinations in 1899, one year later than the other students in her group. Her grade average of 5.05 (scale 1–6) placed her fifth out of the six students taking the examinations that year.[6] (Einstein had come top of the previous year's candidates with a grade average of 5.7)[8] Marić's grade in physics was 5.5 (the same as Einstein's). In 1900, she failed the final teaching diploma examinations with a grade average of 4.00, having obtained only grade 2.5 in the mathematics component (theory of functions).[9] Einstein passed the exam in fourth place with a grade average of 4.91.[10]

Marić's academic career was disrupted in May 1901 on a short holiday in Italy when she became pregnant by Einstein. When three months pregnant, she resat the diploma examination, but failed for the second time without improving her grade.[11] She discontinued work on her diploma dissertation that she had hoped to develop into a PhD thesis under the supervision of the physics professor Heinrich Weber.[12]

She went to Novi Sad, where her daughter was born in 1902, probably in January. The girl was referred to in correspondence between the couple as Hansel before she was born and Lieserl after. At the age of one year, Lieserl suffered from scarlet fever from which she retained permanent damage.[13] Some sources say Lieserl died soon after in 1903,[14] but others suggest she was put up for adoption in Serbia.[15]

 
Center: the Einsteinhaus Kramgasse 49 in Bern. On the second floor: the flat where Albert and Mileva Einstein lived from 1903 to 1905

Debate over collaboration with Einstein

 
Albert and Mileva Einstein, 1912

The question whether (and if so, to what extent) Marić contributed to Albert Einstein's early work, and to the Annus Mirabilis Papers in particular, is a subject of debate. Many historians of physics argue that she made no significant scientific contribution,[16] while others suggest that she was a supportive companion in science and may have helped him materially in his research,[17][18] and there is also a possibility of them developing the scientific concepts together when they were still students.[19]

Debate over co-authorship

Debate over whether Marić was a co-author of some of Einstein's early work, putatively culminating in the 1905 papers, is based on the following evidence:

  • The following passage from Russian physicist Abram Joffe's personal memoirs:

In 1905, three articles appeared in the 'Annalen der Physik', which began three very important branches of 20th century physics. Those were the theory of Brownian motion, the photon theory of light, and the theory of relativity. The author of these articles – an unknown person at that time, was a bureaucrat at the Patent Office in Bern, Einstein-Marity (Marity the maiden name of his wife, which by Swiss custom is added to the husband's family name).

Proponents claim Joffe was erroneously attributing the addition of the name Marity, Marić's official name, to a "non-existent" Swiss custom.[20] Others have argued that it's unlikely Joffe saw the papers before they were published, and also unlikely he would have remembered the exact name on the papers if he did.[21]

  • Mileva told a Serbian friend, referring to 1905, that "we finished some important work that will make my husband world famous."[22] Historians Highfield and Carter argue that this statement is "hometown folklore."[23]

Debate over collaboration

Some of the debate over whether Marić collaborated with Einstein is based on their letters:

  • John Stachel argues that letters in which Einstein referred to "our" theory and "our" work were written in their student days, at least four years before the 1905 papers. Stachel also suggests that some of the instances in which Einstein used "our" in relation to scientific work referred to their diploma dissertations, for which they had each chosen the same topic (experimental studies of heat conduction).[24][7] Stachel argues that Einstein used "our" in general statements, while he invariably used "I" and "my" when he recounted "specific" ideas he was working on: "the letters to Marić show Einstein referring to 'his' studies, 'his' work on the electrodynamics of moving bodies over a dozen times... as compared to 'one' reference to 'our' work on the problem of relative motion."[25]
  • Stachel also suggests that in two cases where letters from Marić survive that directly respond to those from Einstein in which he had recounted his latest ideas, she gives no response at all. Her letters, in contrast to Einstein's, contain only personal matters, or comments related to her Polytechnic coursework. Stachel writes: "In her case, we have no published papers, no letters with a serious scientific content, either to Einstein nor to anyone else; nor any objective evidence of her supposed creative talents. We do not even have hearsay accounts of conversations she had with anyone else that have a specific, scientific content, let alone claiming to report her ideas."[26]

Thus, while some scholars have argued that there is not enough evidence to support the idea that Marić helped Einstein to develop his theories,[27][28][29][7] others have argued that their letters suggest a collaboration between them, at least through 1901 before their children were born.[19]

Some of the debate over whether Marić collaborated with Einstein is based on their interactions:

  • Marić's brother and other relatives reported eyewitness accounts of Marić and Albert discussing physics together when they were married.[19]
  • The couple's first son, Hans Albert (born 1904), said that when his mother married Einstein in 1903, she gave up her scientific ambitions.[30] But he also said how his parents' "scientific collaboration continued into their marriage, and that he remembered seeing [them] work together in the evenings at the same table."[19][31]

Marriage and family

In 1901, Marić was pregnant with Einstein's first child. She managed to hide the pregnancy and travelled to her home town to give birth in order to avoid the scandal. Letters to Einstein have documented that their daughter was born in Novi Sad, in January 1902. No further information is available about what happened to the little girl.[32][33]

In 1903, Marić and Einstein married in Bern, Switzerland, where Einstein had found a job at the Federal Office for Intellectual Property. In 1904, their first son Hans Albert, was born. The Einsteins lived in Bern until 1909, when Einstein got a teaching position at the University of Zürich. In 1910, their second son Eduard was born. In 1911, they moved to Prague, where Einstein held a teaching position at Charles University. A year later, they returned to Zurich, as Einstein had accepted a professorship at his alma mater.

Move to Berlin and separation

In July 1913, Max Planck and Walther Nernst asked Einstein to come to Berlin, which he agreed to, but the decision caused Marić distress.[34] In August, the Einsteins planned a walking holiday with their sons and Marie Curie and her two daughters. Marić was delayed temporarily due to Eduard being ill, but then joined the party. In September 1913, the Einsteins visited Marić's parents near Novi Sad, and on the day they were to leave for Vienna, Marić had her sons baptised as Orthodox Christians.[34] After Vienna, Einstein visited relatives in Germany while Marić returned to Zurich. After Christmas, she traveled to Berlin to stay with Fritz Haber, who helped her look for accommodation for the Einsteins' impending move in April 1914. The Einsteins both left Zurich for Berlin in late March. On the way, Einstein visited an uncle in Antwerp and then Ehrenfest and Lorentz in Leiden, while Marić took a swimming holiday with the children in Locarno, arriving in Berlin in mid-April.[34]

The marriage had been strained since 1912, in the spring of which Einstein became reacquainted with his first cousin, Elsa. They began a regular correspondence. Marić, who had never wanted to go to Berlin, became increasingly unhappy in the city. In mid-July 1914,[35] after settling in Berlin, Einstein insisted on harsh terms if she were to remain with him. Although initially accepting the terms, she reconsidered and on 29 July 1914, the day after World War I started, she left Germany and took the boys back to Zürich, a separation that was to become permanent. Einstein made a legal commitment to send her an annual maintenance of 5600 Reichsmark in quarterly instalments, just under half of his salary,[36][37] a commitment to which he largely adhered.[38] After the required five years of separation, the couple divorced on 14 February 1919.[39]

They had negotiated a settlement[40] whereby the Nobel Prize money that Einstein anticipated he would soon receive was to be placed in trust for their two boys. Einstein would receive the prize for his work, and she would receive the money. Marić could draw on the interest, but had no authority over the capital without Einstein's permission.[41][42] After Einstein married his cousin Elsa in June 1919, he returned to Zurich to talk to Marić about the children's future. During the visit, he took Hans Albert for a sail on Lake Constance and Eduard to Arosa for convalescence.[citation needed]

In 1922, Einstein received news that he had won the Nobel Prize in November. His divorce agreement promised her his Nobel Prize money. Under the terms of the agreement, the money was to be held in trust for their two boys, while she was able to draw on the interest.[43] Based on newly released letters (sealed by Einstein's step-granddaughter, Margot Einstein, until 20 years after her death), Walter Isaacson reported that Marić eventually invested the Nobel Prize money in three apartment buildings in Zurich to produce income.[44][45] Marić lived in one, a five-story house at Huttenstrasse 62; the other two were investments.

In 1930, at around 20, Eduard had a breakdown and was diagnosed with schizophrenia. By the late 1930s, the costs of his care at the University of Zürich's psychiatric clinic "Burghölzli" overwhelmed Marić. She sold the two houses to raise funds for his care and maintenance.[46] In 1939, Marić agreed to transfer ownership of the Huttenstrasse house where she was living to Einstein to prevent its loss, with Marić retaining power of attorney.

Death

Mileva Marić suffered a severe stroke and died at age 72 on 4 August 1948, in Zürich. She was interred there at Nordheim-Cemetery. Eduard Einstein was institutionalized until his death in 1965.[47]

Honours

 
Memorial gravestone at the Nordheim Cemetery in Zürich
 
Bust on the campus of the University of Novi Sad

In 2005, Marić was honoured in Zürich by the ETH and the Gesellschaft zu Fraumünster. A memorial plaque was unveiled on her former residence in Zürich, the house Huttenstrasse 62, in her memory.[48][49][50] In the same year, a bust was placed in her high-school town, Sremska Mitrovica. Another bust is located on the campus of the University of Novi Sad. A high school in her birthplace of Titel is named after her.[51] Sixty years after her death, a memorial plate was placed on the house of the former clinic in Zürich where she died. In June 2009, a memorial gravestone was dedicated to her at the Nordheim-Cemetery in Zürich where she rests.[52]

In 1995, Narodna knjiga in Belgrade published (in Serbian) Mileva Marić Ajnštajn by Dragana Bukumirović, a journalist with Politika.[53]

Three years later, in 1998, Vida Ognjenović produced a drama, Mileva Ajnštajn, which was translated into English in 2002.[54] Ognjenović later adapted the play into a libretto for the opera Mileva, composed by Aleksandra Vrebalov, which premiered in 2011 in the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad.[55][56]

Popular culture

  • In her novel The Other Einstein (2016), Marie Benedict gives a fictionalized account of the relationship between Mileva Marić and Albert Einstein.[57]
  • In 2017, her life was depicted in the first season of the television series Genius, which focuses on Einstein's life. She was played by Samantha Colley and Sally Dexter.[58]
  • A fictionalized depiction of Mileva Marić (portrayed by Christina Jastrzembska) and her potential contributions to Einstein's work is depicted in the first episode of the second season of the time-travelling superhero television series, DC's Legends of Tomorrow.
  • In 2019, physicist and writer Gabriella Greison applied for the posthumous award of a degree to Mileva Maric at the ETH Zurich. After 4 months of discussions, the university denied the degree.[59]
  • Mileva Marić is a major character in Margaret Peterson Haddix's 2012 young-adult science-fiction novel Caught, part of "The Missing" series.
  • In 2022 novel Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus, Mileva Marić is twice mentioned as an example of a pioneering woman scientist whose work was subsumed under that of her famous scientist husband

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Pusch, Luise. "Mileva Einstein-Marić". fembio.org. from the original on 1 April 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  2. ^ M. Popović (2003). In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Marić, Einstein's First Wife, p. xv
    "The Family Tree of Mileva Marić-Einstein"
  3. ^ a b c d e Highfield, 1993, pp. 36–43.
  4. ^ Darko V: Mathematics Intelligencer Sep 2019
  5. ^ Esterson and Cassidy, 2019, pp. 10, 269
  6. ^ a b c d D. Trbuhuvić-Gjurić, Im Schatten Albert Einsteins, 1988, pp. 35, 43, 49, 60, 63
  7. ^ a b c Finkbeiner 2019.
  8. ^ The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Vol. 1, Doc. 42.
  9. ^ Asmodelle, Estelle (2015). "(PDF) The Collaboration of Mileva Maric and Albert Einstein". arXiv:1503.08020 [physics.hist-ph].
  10. ^ The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Vol. 1, Doc. 67
  11. ^ Stachel (1996), pp. 41, 52, n. 22
  12. ^ Highfield, 1993, p. 80
  13. ^ The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Volume 5 The Swiss Years: Correspondence, 1902–1914. Edited by Martin J. Klein, A. J. Kox, and Robert Schulmann.ISBN 9780691033228
  14. ^ Einstein, Albert and Marić, Mileva (1992) The Love Letters. Edited by Jürgen Renn & Robert Schulmann. Translated by Shawn Smith. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. ISBN 0-691-08760-1
  15. ^ Singh, S (2005). Big Bang. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-00-715252-0.
  16. ^ Pais, A. (1994), pp. 1–29
    Holton, G. (1996), pp. 177–93
    Stachel, J. (2002), pp. 26–39, 55
    Martinez, A. (2005)
    Calaprice, A. & T. Lipscombe (2005), pp. 41–42
  17. ^ Maurer, M. (1996); Troemel-Ploetz, S. (1990)
    Walker, E.H. (1991)
  18. ^ Ruth H. Howes, Caroline L. Herzenberg (1999). Their Day in the Sun. Temple University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-1566397193.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  19. ^ a b c d Gagnon, Pauline (19 December 2016). "The Forgotten Life of Einstein's First Wife". Scientific American Blog Network. from the original on 17 October 2020. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  20. ^ Abram F. Joffe: Памяти Алъберта Эйнштейна, Успехи физических наук, т. 57 (2), стр. 187–192 (Pamyati Alberta Eynshtyna, Uspekhi fizicheskikh nauk, v. 57, pp. 187–92 (1955)
  21. ^ Stachel (2005), pp. lxv–lxxii 11 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine; Martinez, A. (2005)
    pp. 51–52 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "Mileva's Story" 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Einstein's Wife, PBS.org; accessed 3 February 2017.
  23. ^ Highfield and Carter (1993), p. 110
  24. ^ Stachel (2002), p. 45.
  25. ^ Stachel (2002), p. 36;
    The letter dated 27 March 1901 from Einstein says in translation: "How happy and proud I will be, when we two together have victoriously led our work on relative motion to an end!"
  26. ^ Stachel (2002), pp. 33–37
    Holton, G. (1996), pp. 181–93.
  27. ^ Holton (1996), pp. 177–93
  28. ^ Stachel (2002), pp. 26–39, 55
  29. ^ Martinez, A.A., Mileva Marić
  30. ^ G.J. Whitrow (ed.), Einstein: The Man and His Achievements, p. 19 (1967)
  31. ^ Krstić, Djordje (2004). Mileva & Albert Einstein : their love and scientific collaboration. Mayer, Janez, 1948–. Radovljica: Didakta. p. 7. ISBN 961-6530-08-9. OCLC 447458003. from the original on 4 May 2022. Retrieved 18 November 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  32. ^ "Die bessere Hälfte". Einsteinfoundation.de. from the original on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  33. ^ "Mileva MarićMileva Marić: Die (fast) vergessene Einstein". Heidelberg University. from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  34. ^ a b c Highfield, 1993, pp. 154–166
  35. ^ Isaacson, Walter (2007). Einstein. New York NY: Simon & Schuster. pp. 185–187. ISBN 978-0-7394-8903-1.
  36. ^ (approximately 44000 Euros — 5600 times 7.9 — as per )
  37. ^ Highfield, 1993, p. 172
    Isaacson, 2007, p. 186.
  38. ^ Fölsing (1997, pp. 420–421), Isaacson (2007, pp. 234–235), Highfield and Carter (1993, p. 186).
  39. ^ Highfield, 1993, p. 188.
  40. ^ . Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  41. ^ Highfield and Carter, p. 187 ("180,000 Swiss Francs")
  42. ^ The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, Vol. 8, document 562.
  43. ^ Einstein Collected Papers, Vol. 8, Docs. pp. 449, 562.
  44. ^ Walter Isaacson, Time 168(3): 50–55, 17 July 2006.
  45. ^ "Einstein Writes About House Bought With Nobel Prize Money". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation. from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  46. ^ Thomas Huonker, Diagnose: «moralisch defekt» Kastration, Sterilisation und «Rassenhygiene» im Dienst der Schweizer Sozialpolitik und Psychiatrie 1890–1970 (2003) 2 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Zürich; accessed 3 February 2017. (in German)
  47. ^ Marić, Mileva; Einstein-Marić, Mileva; Einstein-Maric, Mileva (2003). In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Marić, Einstein's First Wife. JHU Press. ISBN 9780801878565. from the original on 4 May 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  48. ^ "Frauenehrungen" (in German). Gesellschaft zu Fraumünster. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  49. ^ (PDF) (in German). Gesellschaft zu Fraumünster. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 February 2015. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  50. ^ ETH und Gesellschaft zu Fraumünster, Zurich ehren Mileva Einstein-Marić „Mitentwicklerin der Relativitätstheorie" 24 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Sechseläuten 2005. Laudatio: Katharina von Salis 23 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine; accessed 3 February 2017. (in German)
  51. ^ Tesla Memorial Society of New York Website: Mileva Marić-Einstein profile 13 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine, teslasociety.com; accessed 3 February 2017.
  52. ^ Unveiling and consecration of memorial gravestone dedicated to Mileva Marić-Einstein 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Republic of Serbia, Ministry for Diaspora, 14 June 2009.
  53. ^ Savić, Svenka (2002). "The Road to Mileva Marić-Einstein: Private Letters". Belgrade Women's Studies Journal. Belgrade: Belgrade Women's Studies Center. 1 (Anniversary Issue 1992/2002): 201–10. from the original on 23 March 2012. Retrieved 5 May 2011. [...] a book written by Dragana Bukumirović, a journalist with Politika, entitled Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn[...]
  54. ^ Mrs. Einstein takes the stage[dead link], Lincolnwood Review via highbeam.com, 7 November 2002.
  55. ^ "Mileva". Serbian National Theatre. from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  56. ^ "Premijera opere "Mileva"" (in Serbian). blic.rs. 19 October 2011. from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  57. ^ "Fiction Book Review: The Other Einstein by Marie Benedict. Sourcebooks Landmark, $25.99 (304p) ISBN 978-1-4926-3725-7". publishersweekly.com. from the original on 19 January 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  58. ^ Martinez, Albert (25 April 2017). "Einstein's Girlfriend on National Geographic". Sloan Science & Film. from the original on 26 April 2017. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  59. ^ Greison, Gabriella (November 2019). "Il politecnico di Zurigo nega a Mileva Maric la laurea postuma. "Ma Einstein è stato un pessimo marito"". from the original on 4 May 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2019.

References

  • Calaprice, A. & Lipscombe, T. (2005). Albert Einstein: A Biography. Westport and London: Greenwood Press; ISBN 0-313-33080-8
  • Clark, R. W. Einstein: The Life and Times. New York 1971 ISBN 0-690-00664-0, HarperCollins, New York 2007; ISBN 0-06-135184-9
  • Einstein, A. (1987). The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. Volume 1. Ed. J. Stachel et al. Princeton University Press; ISBN 0-691-08475-0
  • Einstein, A. (1987). The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. Volume 1. (English translation). Trans. by A. Beck, Consultant P. Havas. Princeton University Press; ISBN 0-691-08475-0
  • Einstein, A. (1998). The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. Volume 8. Ed. R. Schulmann et al. Princeton University Press; ISBN 978-0-691-04841-3
  • Esterson, A, and Cassidy, D. C. (2019). Einstein's Wife: The Real Story of Mileva Einstein-Marić. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
  • Fölsing, A. (1990) , Die Zeit, 16 November 1990. (English translation 13 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine.)
  • Gearhart, C.A. (1992). "The Education of Albert Einstein", SJU Faculty Colloquium, 15 January 1992."
  • Highfield, R.; Carter, P. (1993). The Private Lives of Albert Einstein. London, UK: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-17170-5.
  • Holton, G. (1996). Einstein, History, and Other Passions. American Institute of Physics, Woodbury, N.Y.; ISBN 1-56396-333-7
  • Isaacson, W. (2007). Einstein. His life and Universe. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Krstić, D. (1991). Appendix A: "Mileva Einstein-Maric." In Elizabeth Roboz Einstein: Hans Albert Einstein. Reminiscences of His Life and Our Life Together, Iowa City (Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research) 1991, pp. 85–99; ISBN 0-87414-083-8
  • Krstić, D. (2004). Mileva & Albert Einstein: Their Love and Scientific Collaboration. DIDAKTA d.o.o. Radovljica; ISBN 961-6530-08-9
  • Martinez, A. (2005). in School Science Review, Vol. 86, No. 316 (March 2005), pp. 49–56.
  • Maurer, M. (1990). , PCnews, Nr. 48, Jg. 11, Heft 3, Wien, Juni 1996, SS 20–27. RLI-Web (August 2005)
  • Milentijević, Radmila (2012). Милева Марић Ајнштајн: живот са Албертом Ајнштајном (Mileva Marić Einstein: A Life with Albert Einstein). Belgrade: Prosveta; ISBN 9788607019632
  • Ognjenović, V. (1998). Mileva Ajnštajn/Mileva Einstein. Translated by Janković, M. In: Ćirilov, J., Pantić, M. (eds.). Infinity Contained in Ten Square Yards. An Anthology of Contemporary Plays, Serbian PEN Centre, Beograd 2008; ISBN 978-86-84555-10-8
  • Pais, Abraham (1994). Einstein Lived Here, Oxford University Press; ISBN 0-19-853994-0
  • Popović, M. (ed.) In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Marić, Einstein's First Wife (2003). Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-7856-X
  • Shankland, R.S. "Conversations with Albert Einstein", in: American Journal of Physics, Vol. 31, 1963, S. 47–57.
  • Stachel, J. (1996). . In H. M. Pycior, N. G. Slack, and P. G. Abir-Am (eds.) (1996), Creative Couples in the Sciences, Rutgers University Press; ISBN 0-8135-2187-4
  • Stachel, J. (2002). Einstein from 'B' to 'Z'. Boston: Birkhäuser; ISBN 3-7643-4143-2 pp. 31–39, 55 11 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • Stachel, J (ed.) Einstein's Miraculous Year: Five Papers That Changed the Face of Physics. Princeton. Appendix to Introduction, Centenary Edition (2005) pp. liv–lxxii 11 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Stefan, V Alexander: Regarding Interalia, Albert Einstein and Mileva Marich Einstein, The World Year of Physics 2008 Honoring Albert Einstein, http://www.stefan-university.edu/ALBERT-EINSTEIN.pdf
  • Trbuhovic-Gjuric, D. (1983). Im Schatten Albert Einsteins. Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein-Maric, Bern: Paul Haupt; ISBN 3-258-04700-6.
  • Trbuhovic-Gjuric, D. Im Schatten Albert Einsteins. Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein-Maric, Bern: Paul Haupt (1988); ISBN 3-258-03973-9.
  • Trbuhovic-Gjuric, D. (1991). Mileva Einstein: Une Vie, Editions des Femmes; ISBN 2-7210-0407-7 (translation into French by Nicole Casanova of Im Schatten Albert Einsteins. Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein-Maric, 1988 edition).
  • Troemel-Ploetz, Senta (1990). "The woman who did Einstein's mathematics". Women's Studies International Forum. 13 (5): 415–32. doi:10.1016/0277-5395(90)90094-E.
  • Walker, E.H.: , Physics Today (February 1991)
  • Zackheim, M.: Einstein's daughter. The search for Lieserl, Riverhead Books, New York (1999); ISBN 1-57322-127-9
  • Finkbeiner, Ann (2019). "The debated legacy of Einstein's first wife". Nature. 567 (7746): 28–29. Bibcode:2019Natur.567...28F. doi:10.1038/d41586-019-00741-6.

External links

  • Mileva Marić-Einstein profile, teslasociety.com; accessed 3 February 2017.
  • , pbs.org; accessed 3 February 2017.
  • [1], The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein; accessed 28 October 2018.
  • Albert-Mileva Correspondence: Original Letters[permanent dead link], Shapell Manuscript Foundation; accessed 3 February 2017.
  • Michael Getler: "Einstein's Wife: The Relative Motion of 'Facts'", The Ombudsman Column (pbs.org), 15 December 2006.
  • The Einstein Controversy – letter by Gerald Holton, Robert Schulmann and John Stachel, 17 December 2008.
  • Robert Dünki & Anna Pia Maissen: «...damit das traurige Dasein unseres Sohnes etwas besser gesichert wird» Mileva und Albert Einsteins Sorgen um ihren Sohn Eduard (1910–1965). Die Familie Einstein und das Stadtarchiv Zürich In: Stadtarchiv Zürich. Jahresbericht 2007–08. (in German)
  • Thomas Huonker: Diagnose: «moralisch defekt» Kastration, Sterilisation und «Rassenhygiene» im Dienst der Schweizer Sozialpolitik und Psychiatrie 1890–1970. «Er versank immer mehr in Apathie und Untätigkeit» Prominente als Patienten, Zürich 2003, p. 204ff. (in German)

mileva, marić, serbian, cyrillic, Милева, Марић, december, 1875, august, 1948, sometimes, called, einstein, serbian, cyrillic, Милева, Марић, Ајнштајн, romanized, ajnštajn, serbian, physicist, mathematician, first, wife, albert, einstein, from, 1903, 1919, onl. Mileva Maric Serbian Cyrillic Mileva Mariћ 19 December 1875 4 August 1948 sometimes called Mileva Maric Einstein Serbian Cyrillic Mileva Mariћ Aјnshtaјn romanized Mileva Maric Ajnstajn was a Serbian physicist and mathematician and the first wife of Albert Einstein from 1903 to 1919 She was the only woman among Einstein s fellow students at Zurich Polytechnic and was the second woman to finish a full program of study at the Department of Mathematics and Physics 1 Maric and Einstein were collaborators and lovers and had a daughter Lieserl in 1902 who likely died of scarlet fever at one and a half years old They later had two sons Hans Albert and Eduard Mileva MaricMileva MariћMaric in 1896BornMileva Maric 1875 12 19 19 December 1875Titel Kingdom of Hungary Austria HungaryDied4 August 1948 1948 08 04 aged 72 Zurich SwitzerlandResting placeFriedhof Nordheim ZurichNationalitySerbianOther namesMileva Maric EinsteinMileva Maric AjnstajnAlma materEidgenossisches Polytechnikum Zurich known today as ETH Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Heidelberg UniversityOccupationMathematicianSpouseAlbert Einstein m 1903 div 1919 wbr ChildrenLieserl EinsteinHans Albert EinsteinEduard Tete EinsteinThey separated in 1914 with Maric taking the boys and returning to Zurich from Berlin They divorced in 1919 When Einstein received the Nobel Prize in 1921 he transferred the money to Maric chiefly to support their sons she had access to the interest In 1930 their second son Eduard had a breakdown at about age 20 and was diagnosed with schizophrenia It is unknown to what extent Maric contributed to Albert Einstein s early work and to the Annus Mirabilis Papers in particular Contents 1 Biography 2 Debate over collaboration with Einstein 2 1 Debate over co authorship 2 2 Debate over collaboration 3 Marriage and family 4 Move to Berlin and separation 5 Death 6 Honours 7 Popular culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksBiography EditOn 19 December 1875 Mileva Maric was born into a wealthy family in Titel in Austria Hungary today Serbia as the eldest of three children of Milos Maric 1846 1922 and Marija Ruzic Maric 1847 1935 2 Shortly after her birth her father ended his military career and took a job at the court in Ruma and later in Zagreb She began her secondary education in 1886 at a high school for girls in Novi Sad but changed the following year to a high school in Sremska Mitrovica 3 Beginning in 1890 Maric attended the Royal Serbian Grammar School in Sabac In 1891 her father obtained special permission to enroll Maric as a private student at the all male Royal Classical High School in Zagreb 3 Her mathematics teacher was Vladimir Varicak 4 She passed the entrance exam and entered the tenth grade in 1892 She won special permission to attend physics lectures in February 1894 and passed the final exams in September 1894 Her highest grades were in mathematics and physics both very good one grade below the highest excellent 5 That year she fell seriously ill and decided to move to Switzerland where on 14 November she started at the Girls High School in Zurich In 1896 she passed her Matura Exam and started studying medicine at the University of Zurich for one semester 3 In the fall of 1896 Maric switched to the Zurich Polytechnic later Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule ETH having passed the mathematics entrance examination with an average grade of 4 25 scale 1 6 6 She enrolled for the diploma course to teach physics and mathematics in secondary schools section VIA at the same time as Albert Einstein She was the only woman in her group of six students and the fifth woman to enter that section She would have had to have been extraordinarily talented to overcome the restrictions on the admission of women 3 6 7 She and Einstein became close friends quite soon In October Maric went to Heidelberg to study at Heidelberg University for the winter semester 1897 98 attending physics and mathematics lectures as an auditor She rejoined the Zurich Polytechnic in April 1898 3 where her studies included the following courses differential and integral calculus descriptive and projective geometry mechanics theoretical physics applied physics experimental physics and astronomy 6 She sat for the intermediate diploma examinations in 1899 one year later than the other students in her group Her grade average of 5 05 scale 1 6 placed her fifth out of the six students taking the examinations that year 6 Einstein had come top of the previous year s candidates with a grade average of 5 7 8 Maric s grade in physics was 5 5 the same as Einstein s In 1900 she failed the final teaching diploma examinations with a grade average of 4 00 having obtained only grade 2 5 in the mathematics component theory of functions 9 Einstein passed the exam in fourth place with a grade average of 4 91 10 Maric s academic career was disrupted in May 1901 on a short holiday in Italy when she became pregnant by Einstein When three months pregnant she resat the diploma examination but failed for the second time without improving her grade 11 She discontinued work on her diploma dissertation that she had hoped to develop into a PhD thesis under the supervision of the physics professor Heinrich Weber 12 She went to Novi Sad where her daughter was born in 1902 probably in January The girl was referred to in correspondence between the couple as Hansel before she was born and Lieserl after At the age of one year Lieserl suffered from scarlet fever from which she retained permanent damage 13 Some sources say Lieserl died soon after in 1903 14 but others suggest she was put up for adoption in Serbia 15 Center the Einsteinhaus Kramgasse 49 in Bern On the second floor the flat where Albert and Mileva Einstein lived from 1903 to 1905Debate over collaboration with Einstein Edit Albert and Mileva Einstein 1912The question whether and if so to what extent Maric contributed to Albert Einstein s early work and to the Annus Mirabilis Papers in particular is a subject of debate Many historians of physics argue that she made no significant scientific contribution 16 while others suggest that she was a supportive companion in science and may have helped him materially in his research 17 18 and there is also a possibility of them developing the scientific concepts together when they were still students 19 Debate over co authorship Edit Debate over whether Maric was a co author of some of Einstein s early work putatively culminating in the 1905 papers is based on the following evidence The following passage from Russian physicist Abram Joffe s personal memoirs In 1905 three articles appeared in the Annalen der Physik which began three very important branches of 20th century physics Those were the theory of Brownian motion the photon theory of light and the theory of relativity The author of these articles an unknown person at that time was a bureaucrat at the Patent Office in Bern Einstein Marity Marity the maiden name of his wife which by Swiss custom is added to the husband s family name Proponents claim Joffe was erroneously attributing the addition of the name Marity Maric s official name to a non existent Swiss custom 20 Others have argued that it s unlikely Joffe saw the papers before they were published and also unlikely he would have remembered the exact name on the papers if he did 21 Mileva told a Serbian friend referring to 1905 that we finished some important work that will make my husband world famous 22 Historians Highfield and Carter argue that this statement is hometown folklore 23 Debate over collaboration Edit Some of the debate over whether Maric collaborated with Einstein is based on their letters John Stachel argues that letters in which Einstein referred to our theory and our work were written in their student days at least four years before the 1905 papers Stachel also suggests that some of the instances in which Einstein used our in relation to scientific work referred to their diploma dissertations for which they had each chosen the same topic experimental studies of heat conduction 24 7 Stachel argues that Einstein used our in general statements while he invariably used I and my when he recounted specific ideas he was working on the letters to Maric show Einstein referring to his studies his work on the electrodynamics of moving bodies over a dozen times as compared to one reference to our work on the problem of relative motion 25 Stachel also suggests that in two cases where letters from Maric survive that directly respond to those from Einstein in which he had recounted his latest ideas she gives no response at all Her letters in contrast to Einstein s contain only personal matters or comments related to her Polytechnic coursework Stachel writes In her case we have no published papers no letters with a serious scientific content either to Einstein nor to anyone else nor any objective evidence of her supposed creative talents We do not even have hearsay accounts of conversations she had with anyone else that have a specific scientific content let alone claiming to report her ideas 26 Thus while some scholars have argued that there is not enough evidence to support the idea that Maric helped Einstein to develop his theories 27 28 29 7 others have argued that their letters suggest a collaboration between them at least through 1901 before their children were born 19 Some of the debate over whether Maric collaborated with Einstein is based on their interactions Maric s brother and other relatives reported eyewitness accounts of Maric and Albert discussing physics together when they were married 19 The couple s first son Hans Albert born 1904 said that when his mother married Einstein in 1903 she gave up her scientific ambitions 30 But he also said how his parents scientific collaboration continued into their marriage and that he remembered seeing them work together in the evenings at the same table 19 31 Marriage and family EditIn 1901 Maric was pregnant with Einstein s first child She managed to hide the pregnancy and travelled to her home town to give birth in order to avoid the scandal Letters to Einstein have documented that their daughter was born in Novi Sad in January 1902 No further information is available about what happened to the little girl 32 33 In 1903 Maric and Einstein married in Bern Switzerland where Einstein had found a job at the Federal Office for Intellectual Property In 1904 their first son Hans Albert was born The Einsteins lived in Bern until 1909 when Einstein got a teaching position at the University of Zurich In 1910 their second son Eduard was born In 1911 they moved to Prague where Einstein held a teaching position at Charles University A year later they returned to Zurich as Einstein had accepted a professorship at his alma mater Move to Berlin and separation EditIn July 1913 Max Planck and Walther Nernst asked Einstein to come to Berlin which he agreed to but the decision caused Maric distress 34 In August the Einsteins planned a walking holiday with their sons and Marie Curie and her two daughters Maric was delayed temporarily due to Eduard being ill but then joined the party In September 1913 the Einsteins visited Maric s parents near Novi Sad and on the day they were to leave for Vienna Maric had her sons baptised as Orthodox Christians 34 After Vienna Einstein visited relatives in Germany while Maric returned to Zurich After Christmas she traveled to Berlin to stay with Fritz Haber who helped her look for accommodation for the Einsteins impending move in April 1914 The Einsteins both left Zurich for Berlin in late March On the way Einstein visited an uncle in Antwerp and then Ehrenfest and Lorentz in Leiden while Maric took a swimming holiday with the children in Locarno arriving in Berlin in mid April 34 The marriage had been strained since 1912 in the spring of which Einstein became reacquainted with his first cousin Elsa They began a regular correspondence Maric who had never wanted to go to Berlin became increasingly unhappy in the city In mid July 1914 35 after settling in Berlin Einstein insisted on harsh terms if she were to remain with him Although initially accepting the terms she reconsidered and on 29 July 1914 the day after World War I started she left Germany and took the boys back to Zurich a separation that was to become permanent Einstein made a legal commitment to send her an annual maintenance of 5600 Reichsmark in quarterly instalments just under half of his salary 36 37 a commitment to which he largely adhered 38 After the required five years of separation the couple divorced on 14 February 1919 39 They had negotiated a settlement 40 whereby the Nobel Prize money that Einstein anticipated he would soon receive was to be placed in trust for their two boys Einstein would receive the prize for his work and she would receive the money Maric could draw on the interest but had no authority over the capital without Einstein s permission 41 42 After Einstein married his cousin Elsa in June 1919 he returned to Zurich to talk to Maric about the children s future During the visit he took Hans Albert for a sail on Lake Constance and Eduard to Arosa for convalescence citation needed In 1922 Einstein received news that he had won the Nobel Prize in November His divorce agreement promised her his Nobel Prize money Under the terms of the agreement the money was to be held in trust for their two boys while she was able to draw on the interest 43 Based on newly released letters sealed by Einstein s step granddaughter Margot Einstein until 20 years after her death Walter Isaacson reported that Maric eventually invested the Nobel Prize money in three apartment buildings in Zurich to produce income 44 45 Maric lived in one a five story house at Huttenstrasse 62 the other two were investments In 1930 at around 20 Eduard had a breakdown and was diagnosed with schizophrenia By the late 1930s the costs of his care at the University of Zurich s psychiatric clinic Burgholzli overwhelmed Maric She sold the two houses to raise funds for his care and maintenance 46 In 1939 Maric agreed to transfer ownership of the Huttenstrasse house where she was living to Einstein to prevent its loss with Maric retaining power of attorney Death EditMileva Maric suffered a severe stroke and died at age 72 on 4 August 1948 in Zurich She was interred there at Nordheim Cemetery Eduard Einstein was institutionalized until his death in 1965 47 Honours Edit Memorial gravestone at the Nordheim Cemetery in Zurich Bust on the campus of the University of Novi SadIn 2005 Maric was honoured in Zurich by the ETH and the Gesellschaft zu Fraumunster A memorial plaque was unveiled on her former residence in Zurich the house Huttenstrasse 62 in her memory 48 49 50 In the same year a bust was placed in her high school town Sremska Mitrovica Another bust is located on the campus of the University of Novi Sad A high school in her birthplace of Titel is named after her 51 Sixty years after her death a memorial plate was placed on the house of the former clinic in Zurich where she died In June 2009 a memorial gravestone was dedicated to her at the Nordheim Cemetery in Zurich where she rests 52 In 1995 Narodna knjiga in Belgrade published in Serbian Mileva Maric Ajnstajn by Dragana Bukumirovic a journalist with Politika 53 Three years later in 1998 Vida Ognjenovic produced a drama Mileva Ajnstajn which was translated into English in 2002 54 Ognjenovic later adapted the play into a libretto for the opera Mileva composed by Aleksandra Vrebalov which premiered in 2011 in the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad 55 56 Popular culture EditIn her novel The Other Einstein 2016 Marie Benedict gives a fictionalized account of the relationship between Mileva Maric and Albert Einstein 57 In 2017 her life was depicted in the first season of the television series Genius which focuses on Einstein s life She was played by Samantha Colley and Sally Dexter 58 A fictionalized depiction of Mileva Maric portrayed by Christina Jastrzembska and her potential contributions to Einstein s work is depicted in the first episode of the second season of the time travelling superhero television series DC s Legends of Tomorrow In 2019 physicist and writer Gabriella Greison applied for the posthumous award of a degree to Mileva Maric at the ETH Zurich After 4 months of discussions the university denied the degree 59 Mileva Maric is a major character in Margaret Peterson Haddix s 2012 young adult science fiction novel Caught part of The Missing series In 2022 novel Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus Mileva Maric is twice mentioned as an example of a pioneering woman scientist whose work was subsumed under that of her famous scientist husbandSee also EditRelativity priority dispute Milos Maric scientist Notes Edit Pusch Luise Mileva Einstein Maric fembio org Archived from the original on 1 April 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2016 M Popovic 2003 In Albert s Shadow The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric Einstein s First Wife p xv The Family Tree of Mileva Maric Einstein a b c d e Highfield 1993 pp 36 43 Darko V Mathematics Intelligencer Sep 2019 Esterson and Cassidy 2019 pp 10 269 a b c d D Trbuhuvic Gjuric Im Schatten Albert Einsteins 1988 pp 35 43 49 60 63 a b c Finkbeiner 2019 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Vol 1 Doc 42 Asmodelle Estelle 2015 PDF The Collaboration of Mileva Maric and Albert Einstein arXiv 1503 08020 physics hist ph The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Vol 1 Doc 67 Stachel 1996 pp 41 52 n 22 Highfield 1993 p 80 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Volume 5 The Swiss Years Correspondence 1902 1914 Edited by Martin J Klein A J Kox and Robert Schulmann ISBN 9780691033228 Einstein Albert and Maric Mileva 1992 The Love Letters Edited by Jurgen Renn amp Robert Schulmann Translated by Shawn Smith Princeton University Press Princeton N J ISBN 0 691 08760 1 Singh S 2005 Big Bang Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 00 715252 0 Pais A 1994 pp 1 29Holton G 1996 pp 177 93Stachel J 2002 pp 26 39 55Martinez A 2005 Calaprice A amp T Lipscombe 2005 pp 41 42 Maurer M 1996 Troemel Ploetz S 1990 Walker E H 1991 Ruth H Howes Caroline L Herzenberg 1999 Their Day in the Sun Temple University Press p 26 ISBN 978 1566397193 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b c d Gagnon Pauline 19 December 2016 The Forgotten Life of Einstein s First Wife Scientific American Blog Network Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Retrieved 17 October 2020 Abram F Joffe Pamyati Alberta Ejnshtejna Uspehi fizicheskih nauk t 57 2 str 187 192 Pamyati Alberta Eynshtyna Uspekhi fizicheskikh nauk v 57 pp 187 92 1955 Stachel 2005 pp lxv lxxii Archived 11 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Martinez A 2005 pp 51 52 Archived 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Mileva s Story Archived 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Einstein s Wife PBS org accessed 3 February 2017 Highfield and Carter 1993 p 110 Stachel 2002 p 45 Stachel 2002 p 36 The letter dated 27 March 1901 from Einstein says in translation How happy and proud I will be when we two together have victoriously led our work on relative motion to an end Stachel 2002 pp 33 37Holton G 1996 pp 181 93 Holton 1996 pp 177 93 Stachel 2002 pp 26 39 55 Martinez A A Mileva Maric G J Whitrow ed Einstein The Man and His Achievements p 19 1967 Krstic Djordje 2004 Mileva amp Albert Einstein their love and scientific collaboration Mayer Janez 1948 Radovljica Didakta p 7 ISBN 961 6530 08 9 OCLC 447458003 Archived from the original on 4 May 2022 Retrieved 18 November 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Die bessere Halfte Einsteinfoundation de Archived from the original on 21 January 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Mileva MaricMileva Maric Die fast vergessene Einstein Heidelberg University Archived from the original on 16 April 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2022 a b c Highfield 1993 pp 154 166 Isaacson Walter 2007 Einstein New York NY Simon amp Schuster pp 185 187 ISBN 978 0 7394 8903 1 approximately 44000 Euros 5600 times 7 9 as per this extract Highfield 1993 p 172Isaacson 2007 p 186 Folsing 1997 pp 420 421 Isaacson 2007 pp 234 235 Highfield and Carter 1993 p 186 Highfield 1993 p 188 Einstein Works Out Details of His 1919 Divorce from Mileva Maric Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 18 January 2021 Highfield and Carter p 187 180 000 Swiss Francs The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Vol 8 document 562 Einstein Collected Papers Vol 8 Docs pp 449 562 Walter Isaacson Time 168 3 50 55 17 July 2006 Einstein Writes About House Bought With Nobel Prize Money Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Thomas Huonker Diagnose moralisch defekt Kastration Sterilisation und Rassenhygiene im Dienst der Schweizer Sozialpolitik und Psychiatrie 1890 1970 2003 Archived 2 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Zurich accessed 3 February 2017 in German Maric Mileva Einstein Maric Mileva Einstein Maric Mileva 2003 In Albert s Shadow The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric Einstein s First Wife JHU Press ISBN 9780801878565 Archived from the original on 4 May 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Frauenehrungen in German Gesellschaft zu Fraumunster Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 November 2014 Frauenehrungen der Gesellschaft zu Fraumunster PDF in German Gesellschaft zu Fraumunster 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2014 ETH und Gesellschaft zu Fraumunster Zurich ehren Mileva Einstein Maric Mitentwicklerin der Relativitatstheorie Archived 24 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Sechselauten 2005 Laudatio Katharina von Salis Archived 23 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed 3 February 2017 in German Tesla Memorial Society of New York Website Mileva Maric Einstein profile Archived 13 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine teslasociety com accessed 3 February 2017 Unveiling and consecration of memorial gravestone dedicated to Mileva Maric Einstein Archived 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Republic of Serbia Ministry for Diaspora 14 June 2009 Savic Svenka 2002 The Road to Mileva Maric Einstein Private Letters Belgrade Women s Studies Journal Belgrade Belgrade Women s Studies Center 1 Anniversary Issue 1992 2002 201 10 Archived from the original on 23 March 2012 Retrieved 5 May 2011 a book written by Dragana Bukumirovic a journalist with Politika entitled Mileva Maric Ajnstajn Mrs Einstein takes the stage dead link Lincolnwood Review via highbeam com 7 November 2002 Mileva Serbian National Theatre Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2016 Premijera opere Mileva in Serbian blic rs 19 October 2011 Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2016 Fiction Book Review The Other Einstein by Marie Benedict Sourcebooks Landmark 25 99 304p ISBN 978 1 4926 3725 7 publishersweekly com Archived from the original on 19 January 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2018 Martinez Albert 25 April 2017 Einstein s Girlfriend on National Geographic Sloan Science amp Film Archived from the original on 26 April 2017 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Greison Gabriella November 2019 Il politecnico di Zurigo nega a Mileva Maric la laurea postuma Ma Einstein e stato un pessimo marito Archived from the original on 4 May 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2019 References EditCalaprice A amp Lipscombe T 2005 Albert Einstein A Biography Westport and London Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 33080 8 Clark R W Einstein The Life and Times New York 1971 ISBN 0 690 00664 0 HarperCollins New York 2007 ISBN 0 06 135184 9 Einstein A 1987 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Volume 1 Ed J Stachel et al Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08475 0 Einstein A 1987 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Volume 1 English translation Trans by A Beck Consultant P Havas Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08475 0 Einstein A 1998 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Volume 8 Ed R Schulmann et al Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 04841 3 Esterson A and Cassidy D C 2019 Einstein s Wife The Real Story of Mileva Einstein Maric Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press Folsing A 1990 Keine Mutter der Relativitatstheorie Die Zeit 16 November 1990 English translation Archived 13 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine Gearhart C A 1992 The Education of Albert Einstein SJU Faculty Colloquium 15 January 1992 Highfield R Carter P 1993 The Private Lives of Albert Einstein London UK Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 17170 5 Holton G 1996 Einstein History and Other Passions American Institute of Physics Woodbury N Y ISBN 1 56396 333 7 Isaacson W 2007 Einstein His life and Universe New York Simon amp Schuster Krstic D 1991 Appendix A Mileva Einstein Maric In Elizabeth Roboz Einstein Hans Albert Einstein Reminiscences of His Life and Our Life Together Iowa City Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research 1991 pp 85 99 ISBN 0 87414 083 8 Krstic D 2004 Mileva amp Albert Einstein Their Love and Scientific Collaboration DIDAKTA d o o Radovljica ISBN 961 6530 08 9 Martinez A 2005 Handling evidence in history the case of Einstein s Wife in School Science Review Vol 86 No 316 March 2005 pp 49 56 Maurer M 1990 Weil nicht sein kann was nicht sein darf DIE ELTERN ODER DER VATER DER RELATIVITATSTHEORIE Zum Streit uber den Anteil von Mileva Maric an der Entstehung der Relativitatstheorie PCnews Nr 48 Jg 11 Heft 3 Wien Juni 1996 SS 20 27 RLI Web August 2005 Milentijevic Radmila 2012 Mileva Mariћ Aјnshtaјn zhivot sa Albertom Aјnshtaјnom Mileva Maric Einstein A Life with Albert Einstein Belgrade Prosveta ISBN 9788607019632 Ognjenovic V 1998 Mileva Ajnstajn Mileva Einstein Translated by Jankovic M In Cirilov J Pantic M eds Infinity Contained in Ten Square Yards An Anthology of Contemporary Plays Serbian PEN Centre Beograd 2008 ISBN 978 86 84555 10 8 Pais Abraham 1994 Einstein Lived Here Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 853994 0 Popovic M ed In Albert s Shadow The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric Einstein s First Wife 2003 Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 7856 X Shankland R S Conversations with Albert Einstein in American Journal of Physics Vol 31 1963 S 47 57 Stachel J 1996 Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric A Collaboration that Failed to Develop In H M Pycior N G Slack and P G Abir Am eds 1996 Creative Couples in the Sciences Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2187 4 Stachel J 2002 Einstein from B to Z Boston Birkhauser ISBN 3 7643 4143 2 pp 31 39 55 Archived 11 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Stachel J ed Einstein s Miraculous Year Five Papers That Changed the Face of Physics Princeton Appendix to Introduction Centenary Edition 2005 pp liv lxxii Archived 11 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Stefan V Alexander Regarding Interalia Albert Einstein and Mileva Marich Einstein The World Year of Physics 2008 Honoring Albert Einstein http www stefan university edu ALBERT EINSTEIN pdf Trbuhovic Gjuric D 1983 Im Schatten Albert Einsteins Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein Maric Bern Paul Haupt ISBN 3 258 04700 6 Trbuhovic Gjuric D Im Schatten Albert Einsteins Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein Maric Bern Paul Haupt 1988 ISBN 3 258 03973 9 Trbuhovic Gjuric D 1991 Mileva Einstein Une Vie Editions des Femmes ISBN 2 7210 0407 7 translation into French by Nicole Casanova of Im Schatten Albert Einsteins Das tragische Leben der Mileva Einstein Maric 1988 edition Troemel Ploetz Senta 1990 The woman who did Einstein s mathematics Women s Studies International Forum 13 5 415 32 doi 10 1016 0277 5395 90 90094 E Walker E H Did Einstein espouse his spouse s ideas with a reply by John Stachel et al Physics Today February 1991 Zackheim M Einstein s daughter The search for Lieserl Riverhead Books New York 1999 ISBN 1 57322 127 9 Finkbeiner Ann 2019 The debated legacy of Einstein s first wife Nature 567 7746 28 29 Bibcode 2019Natur 567 28F doi 10 1038 d41586 019 00741 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mileva Maric Mileva Maric Einstein profile teslasociety com accessed 3 February 2017 Einstein s Wife The Life of Mileva Maric Einstein pbs org accessed 3 February 2017 1 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein accessed 28 October 2018 Albert Mileva Correspondence Original Letters permanent dead link Shapell Manuscript Foundation accessed 3 February 2017 Michael Getler Einstein s Wife The Relative Motion of Facts The Ombudsman Column pbs org 15 December 2006 The Einstein Controversy letter by Gerald Holton Robert Schulmann and John Stachel 17 December 2008 Robert Dunki amp Anna Pia Maissen damit das traurige Dasein unseres Sohnes etwas besser gesichert wird Mileva und Albert Einsteins Sorgen um ihren Sohn Eduard 1910 1965 Die Familie Einstein und das Stadtarchiv Zurich In Stadtarchiv Zurich Jahresbericht 2007 08 in German Thomas Huonker Diagnose moralisch defekt Kastration Sterilisation und Rassenhygiene im Dienst der Schweizer Sozialpolitik und Psychiatrie 1890 1970 Er versank immer mehr in Apathie und Untatigkeit Prominente als Patienten Zurich 2003 p 204ff in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mileva Maric amp oldid 1165861602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.