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Einstein family

The Einstein family is the family of physicist Albert Einstein (1879–1955). Einstein's great-great-great-great-grandfather, Jakob Weil, was his oldest recorded relative, born in the late 17th century, and the family continues to this day. Albert Einstein's great-great-grandfather, Löb Moses Sontheimer (1745–1831), was also the grandfather of the tenor Heinrich Sontheim (1820–1912) of Stuttgart.[1]

Hermann EinsteinAlbert EinsteinMaja EinsteinPauline Koch
Hermann Einstein (top); Albert Einstein and Maja Einstein (bottom left); Pauline Koch (bottom right)

Albert's three children were from his relationship with his first wife, Mileva Marić, his daughter Lieserl being born a year before they married. Albert Einstein's second wife was Elsa Einstein, whose mother Fanny Koch was the sister of Albert's mother, and whose father, Rudolf Einstein, was the son of Raphael Einstein, a brother of Albert's paternal grandfather. Albert and Elsa were thus first cousins through their mothers and second cousins through their fathers.[2]

Etymology Edit

Einstein (English: /ˈnstn/ EYEN-styne, German: [ˈaɪnʃtaɪn] (listeni)) is either a German habitational surname from various places named with a Middle High German derivative of the verb einsteinen 'to enclose, surround with stone'; or a Jewish (Ashkenazic) adaptation of the German name, or else an ornamental name using the ending -stein 'stone'.[3]

Pauline Koch (Albert's mother) Edit

Pauline Einstein (née Koch)
 
Born(1858-02-08)8 February 1858
Died20 February 1920(1920-02-20) (aged 62)
SpouseHermann Einstein
ChildrenAlbert Einstein
Maja Einstein
Parent(s)Julius Derzbacher
Jette Bernheimer

Pauline Einstein (née Koch) (8 February 1858 – 20 February 1920) was the mother of the physicist Albert Einstein. She was born in Cannstatt, Kingdom of Württemberg.[4] She was Jewish and had an older sister, Fanny, and two older brothers, Jacob and Caesar. Her parents were Julius Doerzbacher, who had adopted the family name Koch in 1842, and Jette Bernheimer. They were married in 1847. Pauline's father was from Jebenhausen, now part of the city of Göppingen, and grew up in modest economic circumstances. Later, he lived in Cannstatt and together with his brother Heinrich, made a considerable fortune in the corn trade. They even became "Royal Württemberg Purveyor to the Court". Their mother was from Cannstatt and was a quiet and caring person.

Early life Edit

At 18 years old, Pauline married the merchant Hermann Einstein who lived in Ulm. They married in Cannstatt on 8 August 1876. After the wedding, the young couple lived in Ulm, where Hermann became joint partner in a bed feathers company. Their son, Albert was born on 14 March 1879.[5] On the initiative of Hermann's brother Jakob the family moved to Munich in the summer of 1880, where the two brothers together founded an electrical engineering company called[6] Einstein & Cie. The second child of Hermann and Pauline, their daughter Maria (called Maja), was born in Munich on 18 November 1881. Pauline Einstein was a well-educated and quiet woman who had an inclination for the arts. She was a talented and dedicated piano player. She made Albert begin violin lessons at the age of five.[7]

Business problems Edit

The factory of Hermann and Jakob was moved to Pavia, Italy, in 1894. Hermann, Maria and Pauline moved to Milan in the same year and one year later, moved to Pavia. Albert stayed with relatives in Munich to continue his education there. Unfortunately, the business was unsuccessful and the brothers had to abandon their factory in 1896. Though Hermann had lost most of his money, he founded (without his brother) another electrical engineering company in Milan. This time business was better. However, Hermann's health had deteriorated, and he died of heart failure in Milan on 10 October 1902.

After Hermann Edit

In 1903, Pauline went to live with her sister Fanny and her husband Rudolf Einstein, a first cousin of Hermann, in Hechingen, Württemberg. Fanny's daughter, Elsa was to become the second wife of Albert in 1919. In 1910, Pauline moved with her sister, Fanny and her family to Berlin. She took on a job as housekeeper in Heilbronn, Kingdom of Württemberg in 1911. She lived with her brother Jacob Koch in Zurich and from 1915 in Heilbronn again.

Death Edit

During World War I, Pauline fell ill with cancer. In 1918, when visiting her daughter, Maria, and son-in-law, Paul Winteler, in Luzern, Pauline was taken to the sanatorium Rosenau, due to her illness. At the end of 1919, Albert took his terminally-ill mother out of the sanatorium in Luzern and brought her to Haberlandstrasse 5, Berlin, to stay with him and his second wife, Elsa, where she later died that year.

Hermann Einstein (Albert's father) Edit

Hermann Einstein
 
Born(1847-08-30)30 August 1847
Died10 October 1902(1902-10-10) (aged 55)
NationalitySubject of Kingdom of Württemberg (1847–1894)
Subject of Kingdom of Italy (1894–1902)
Occupation(s)Scientific utility salesman, electrician
SpousePauline Koch
ChildrenAlbert Einstein
Maja Einstein
Parent(s)Abraham Einstein
Helene Moos
RelativesHans Albert Einstein (grandson)
Lieserl Einstein (granddaughter)
Eduard Einstein (grandson)

Hermann Einstein (30 August 1847 – 10 October 1902) was the father of Albert Einstein. He was Ashkenazi Jewish.

Early life Edit

 
Abraham and Helene Einstein

Hermann Einstein was born in Buchau, Kingdom of Württemberg to Abraham Einstein and Helene Moos (3 July 1814 – 20 August 1887).

He had six siblings:[8]

  • Raphael (3 December 1839 – 15 January 1842); male
  • Jette (13 January 1844 – 7 January 1905); female
  • Heinrich (12 October 1845 – 16 November 1877); male
  • August Ignaz (23 December 1849 – 14 April 1911); male
  • Jakob (25 November 1850 – 1912); male
  • Friederike "Rika" (15 March 1855 – 17 June 1938); female

At the age of 14, Hermann attended the secondary school in the regional capital Stuttgart and was academically successful. He had a strong affection for mathematics, and would have liked to study in this or a related area, but as the financial situation of the family precluded further education, he decided to become a merchant and began an apprenticeship in Stuttgart.

Marriage to Pauline Edit

Hermann married 18-year-old Pauline Koch in Cannstatt, Kingdom of Württemberg on 8 August 1876. After their wedding, the young couple lived in Ulm, where Hermann became joint partner in the feather bed shop of his cousins, Moses and Hermann Levi. In Ulm, their eldest son Albert was born on 14 March 1879. On the initiative of Hermann's brother Jakob, the family moved to Munich in the summer of 1880. There, the two brothers founded the electrical engineering company Einstein & Cie, with Hermann being the merchant and Jakob the technician. The second child of Hermann and Pauline, their daughter Maria (called Maja), was born in Munich on 18 November 1881.

Work Edit

The Einsteins' electrical firm manufactured dynamos and electrical meters based on direct current. They were instrumental in bringing electricity to Munich. In 1885, they won the contract that provided DC lights to illuminate the Oktoberfest for the first time.

In 1893 the Einstein brothers lost a bid on a contract for the electrification of Munich to Schukert; Hermann and Jakob's small company lacked the capital to convert their equipment over from the direct current (DC) standard to the more efficient alternating current (AC) standard being used by Schukert.[9] Their fortunes took a downward turn from there. They were forced to sell their Munich factory and, in search of business, the two brothers moved their company to Pavia, Italy in 1894. Hermann, Pauline and Maja moved to Milan in the same year and one year later moved to Pavia. Albert stayed with relatives in Munich to continue his education there, though he spent time in Pavia as well.[10]

Due to poor business, Hermann and Jakob had to abandon their factory in 1896.[11] Though Hermann had lost most of their money, he founded another electrical engineering company in Milan, this time without his brother. He was supported financially by his relative Rudolf Einstein in this venture.[12]

Death Edit

Hermann Einstein died of heart failure in Milan in 1902. His grave is in Civico Mausoleo Palanti inside Cimitero Monumentale di Milano. Hermann Einstein was 55 years old when he died.

Maria "Maja" Einstein (Albert's younger sister) Edit

Maria 'Maja' Einstein
 
Maria 'Maja' Einstein in the 1900s
Born
Maria Einstein

(1881-11-18)18 November 1881
Munich, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire
Died25 June 1951(1951-06-25) (aged 69)
Princeton, New Jersey, United States
NationalityGerman, Swiss, American
OccupationDoctor
PartnerPaul Winteler
Parent(s)Hermann Einstein
Pauline Koch
RelativesAlbert Einstein (brother)

Maria "Maja" Einstein (18 November 1881 – 25 June 1951) and her older brother, Albert, were the two children of Hermann Einstein and Pauline Einstein (née Koch), who had moved from Ulm to Munich in June 1881, when Albert was one.[13] There Hermann and his brother Jakob had founded Einstein & Cie., an electrical engineering company.[14]

 
Maja and Albert, c. 1886
 
Maja and Albert, c. 1893

She attended elementary school in Munich from 1887 to 1894. She then moved with her parents to Milan, where she attended the German International School; Albert had stayed behind with relatives in Munich to complete his schooling. From 1899 to 1902, she attended a workshop for teachers in Aarau. After she passed her final exams, she studied Romance languages and literature in Berlin, Bern and Paris. In 1909, she graduated from the University of Bern; her dissertation was entitled "Contribution to the Tradition of the Chevalier au Cygne and the Enfances Godefroi".

In the year following her graduation, she married Paul Winteler, but they were to be childless. The young couple moved to Luzern in 1911, where Maja's husband had found a job. In 1922, they moved to Colonnata near Florence in Italy.[15]

After the Italian leader Benito Mussolini introduced anti-Semitic laws in Italy, Albert invited Maja to emigrate to the United States in 1939 and live in his residence in Mercer Street, Princeton, New Jersey. Her husband was denied entry into the United States on health grounds.[14] Maja spent some pleasant years with Albert, until she had a stroke in 1946, and became bedridden.[16] She later developed progressive arteriosclerosis, and died in Princeton on 25 June 1951 four years before her brother.[16]

Lieserl Einstein (Albert's daughter) Edit

Lieserl Einstein
Born(1902-01-27)27 January 1902
DiedSeptember 1903(1903-09-00) (aged 1)
Parents
RelativesPauline Koch (paternal grandmother)
Hermann Einstein (paternal grandfather)
Hans Albert Einstein
Eduard Einstein

Lieserl Einstein (27 January 1902 – September 1903) was the first child of Mileva Marić and Albert Einstein.

According to the correspondence between her parents, Lieserl was born on 27 January 1902, a year before her parents married, in Újvidék, Austria-Hungary, present-day Novi Sad, Serbia, and was cared for by her mother for a short time while Einstein worked in Switzerland before Marić joined him there without the child.

Lieserl's existence was unknown to biographers until 1986, when a batch of letters between Albert and Mileva Marić was discovered by Hans Albert Einstein's daughter Evelyn.

Marić had hoped for a girl, while Einstein would have preferred a boy. In their letters, they called the unborn child "Lieserl", when referring to a girl, or "Hanserl", if a boy. Both "Lieserl" and "Hanserl" were diminutives of the common German names Liese (short for Elizabeth) and Hans.

The first reference to Marić's pregnancy was found in a letter Einstein wrote to her from Winterthur, probably on 28 May 1901 (letter 36), asking twice about "the boy" and "our little son",[17] whereas Marić's first reference was found in her letter of 13 November 1901 (letter 43) from Stein am Rhein, in which she referred to the unborn child as "Lieserl".[18] Einstein goes along with Marić's wish for a daughter, and referred to the unborn child as "Lieserl" as well, but with a sense of humour as in letter 45 of 12 December 1901 "... and be happy about our Lieserl, whom I secretly (so Dollie[19] doesn't notice) prefer to imagine a Hanserl."[20]

The child must have been born shortly before 4 February 1902, when Einstein wrote: "... now you see that it really is a Lieserl, just as you'd wished. Is she healthy and does she cry properly? [...] I love her so much and don't even know her yet!"[21]

The last time "Lieserl" was mentioned in their extant correspondence was in Einstein's letter of 19 September 1903 (letter 54), in which he showed concern that she had scarlet fever. His asking "As what is the child registered?" adding "We must take precautions that problems don't arise for her later" may indicate the intention to give the child up for adoption.[22]

As neither the full name nor the fate of the child are known, several hypotheses about her life and death have been put forward:

  • Michele Zackheim, in her book on "Lieserl", Einstein's Daughter, states that "Lieserl" had a developmental disability, and that she lived with her mother's family and probably died of scarlet fever in September 1903.[23]
  • Another possibility, favoured by Robert Schulmann of the Einstein Papers Project, is that "Lieserl" was adopted by Marić's close friend, Helene Savić, and was raised by her and lived under the name "Zorka Savić" until the 1990s. Savić did in fact raise a child by the name of Zorka, who was blind from childhood and died in the 1990s. Before his death in 2012, her grandson Milan N. Popović, upon extensive research of the relationship between Einstein and Marić, rejected the possibility that it was "Lieserl", and also favoured the hypothesis that the child died in September 1903.[24]

A letter widely circulated on the Internet on the "universal force" of love, attributed as "a letter from Albert Einstein to his daughter", is a hoax.[25][26]

Hans Albert Einstein (Albert's first son) Edit

Hans Albert Einstein (May 14, 1904 – July 26, 1973) was born in Bern, Switzerland, the second child and first son of Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić. Hans earned his doctorate at ETH Zurich in 1936 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1938. He was a long-time professor of Hydraulic engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, widely recognized for his research on sediment transport.[27][28]

Eduard "Tete" Einstein (Albert's second son) Edit

Eduard Einstein
Born(1910-07-28)28 July 1910
Zurich, Switzerland
Died25 October 1965(1965-10-25) (aged 55)
Psychiatric Clinic Burghölzli, Zurich
Resting placeCemetery Hönggerberg,
Other names"Tete"
Parent(s)Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić
RelativesHans Albert Einstein, Lieserl

Eduard Einstein (28 July 1910 – 25 October 1965) was born in Zürich, Switzerland, the second son of physicist Albert Einstein from his first wife Mileva Marić. Albert Einstein and his family moved to Berlin in 1914. Shortly thereafter the parents separated, and Marić returned to Zürich, taking Eduard and his older brother Hans Albert with her. His father remarried in 1919 and in 1933 emigrated to the United States under the threat of Germany's rising Nazi regime.

Eduard was a good student and had musical talent. After gymnasium, he started to study medicine to become a psychiatrist, but by the age of 21 he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. He was institutionalized two years later for the first of several times. Biographers of his father have speculated that the drugs and "cures" of the time damaged rather than aided the young Einstein.[29] His brother Hans Albert Einstein believed that his memory and cognitive abilities had been deeply affected by electroconvulsive therapy treatments Eduard received while institutionalized.[30]

After a breakdown, Eduard had told his father Albert that he hated him, and after the father's emigration to the United States they never saw each other again.[31] The father and son, whom the father fondly referred to as "Tete" (for petit), corresponded regularly before and after Eduard became ill. Their correspondence continued after the father's immigration to the U.S.[32][33]

Eduard remained interested in music and art,[34] wrote poetry,[35] and was a Sigmund Freud enthusiast. He hung a picture of Freud on his bedroom wall.[36]

His mother cared for him until she died in 1948. From then on Eduard lived most of the time at the psychiatric clinic Burghölzli in Zurich, where he died in 1965 of a stroke at age 55. He is buried at Hönggerberg Cemetery in Zurich.[37]

See also Edit

  • Genius, a television series depicting the Einsteins

References Edit

  1. ^ Aron Tanzer (1988). Die Geschichte der Juden in Jebenhausen und Göppingen (The History of Jews in Jebenhausen and Göppingen). Weissenhorn, Germany: Anton H. Konrad Verlag. pp. 220, 301, 334, 378, 383.
  2. ^ "Short life history: Elsa Einstein".
  3. ^ Modified from P. Hanks; F. Hodges (1997). A dictionary of surnames. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  4. ^ "Short life history: Pauline Einstein". Albert Einstein In The World Wide Web. ETH-Bibliothek, Zurich. January 2015.
  5. ^ "Albert Einstein – Biography". Nobel Foundation. from the original on 6 March 2007. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  6. ^ Schwartz, Joseph (2005). Introducing Einstein. ISBN 1-84046-667-7.
  7. ^ Botstein, Leon; Galison, Peter; Holton, Gerald James; Schweber, Silvan S. (2008) Einstein for the 21st Century: His Legacy in Science, Art, and Modern Culture, Princeton Univ. Press
  8. ^ "Short life history: Hermann Einstein" 8 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Albert Einstein, autobiographic writings, 1946
  9. ^ Barry R. Parker, Einstein: The Passions of a Scientist, Prometheus Books – 2003, page 31
  10. ^ Michaels, Daniel; Sylvers, Eric (26 December 2021). "Italian Tech Startup Revives Einstein's Father's Power Plant". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  12. ^ Christof Rieber, Albert Einstein. Biografie eines Nonkonformisten, Thorbecke 2018, page 78 f.
  13. ^ www.einstein-website.de
  14. ^ a b Short life history: Maria Winteler-Einstein
  15. ^ Highfield & Carter 1993, p. 203
  16. ^ a b Highfield & Carter 1993, p. 248
  17. ^ The Love Letters, p. 54
  18. ^ The Love Letters, p. 63
  19. ^ the english translation of the german "Doxerl", one of the names Einstein used for Marić
  20. ^ The Love Letters, p. 66
  21. ^ The Love Letters, p. 73
  22. ^ The Love Letters, p. 78
  23. ^ Lieserl Einstein's biography
  24. ^ Milan Popović: In Alberts Shadow. The life and letters of Mileva Marić, Einstein's first wife, Johns Hopkins University Press, London 2003, p.11, ISBN 978-0-8018-7856-5
  25. ^ The Truth Behind Einstein's Letter on the 'Universal Force' of Love
  26. ^ "A Universal Force". Snopes.com. 28 April 2015. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  27. ^ "University of California In Memoriam". www.lib.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  28. ^ "Short life history: Hans Albert Einstein". www.einstein-website.de. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  29. ^ Clark, Ronald W. (1971). Einstein: The Life and Times[page needed]. Avon. ISBN 0-380-44123-3.
  30. ^ Barry Parker (2003): Einstein: The Passions of a Scientist. Prometheus Books. New York. p. 236.
  31. ^ Parker (2003): Einstein, pp. 236-237.
  32. ^ "Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein, 1928". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
  33. ^ "Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein, 1944". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
  34. ^ "Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein, circa 1933". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
  35. ^ "Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein, 1933". Shapell Manuscript Collection. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
  36. ^ "Albert Einstein on Sigmund Freud"
  37. ^ 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 2007/2008. (german)

Works cited Edit

  • 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
  • Highfield; Carter, Paul (1993). The Private Lives of Albert Einstein. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-17170-2.
  • Christof Rieber: Albert Einstein. Biografie eines Nonkonformisten. Thorbecke: Ostfildern 2018 ISBN 978-3-7995-1281-7

Further reading Edit

  • Michele Zackheim, Einstein's Daughter: the Search for Lieserl, Riverhead 1999, ISBN 1-57322-127-9.

External links Edit

  • Lieserl Einstein's Biography from einstein-website.de
  • Pauline Koch's fact file from einstein-website.de

einstein, family, this, article, about, family, albert, einstein, other, people, named, einstein, einstein, surname, family, physicist, albert, einstein, 1879, 1955, einstein, great, great, great, great, grandfather, jakob, weil, oldest, recorded, relative, bo. This article is about the family of Albert Einstein For other people named Einstein see Einstein surname The Einstein family is the family of physicist Albert Einstein 1879 1955 Einstein s great great great great grandfather Jakob Weil was his oldest recorded relative born in the late 17th century and the family continues to this day Albert Einstein s great great grandfather Lob Moses Sontheimer 1745 1831 was also the grandfather of the tenor Heinrich Sontheim 1820 1912 of Stuttgart 1 Albert EinsteinCurrent regionWorldwidePlace of originPrince Bishopric of Augsburg Duchy of Wurttemberg Kingdom of Wurttemberg Electorate of Bavaria Kingdom of Bavaria Switzerland German EmpireMembersAlbert Einstein Maja Einstein Hermann Einstein Pauline KochConnected familiesKoch Moos OvernauerHermann Einstein top Albert Einstein and Maja Einstein bottom left Pauline Koch bottom right Albert s three children were from his relationship with his first wife Mileva Maric his daughter Lieserl being born a year before they married Albert Einstein s second wife was Elsa Einstein whose mother Fanny Koch was the sister of Albert s mother and whose father Rudolf Einstein was the son of Raphael Einstein a brother of Albert s paternal grandfather Albert and Elsa were thus first cousins through their mothers and second cousins through their fathers 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Pauline Koch Albert s mother 2 1 Early life 2 2 Business problems 2 3 After Hermann 2 4 Death 3 Hermann Einstein Albert s father 3 1 Early life 3 2 Marriage to Pauline 3 3 Work 3 4 Death 4 Maria Maja Einstein Albert s younger sister 5 Lieserl Einstein Albert s daughter 6 Hans Albert Einstein Albert s first son 7 Eduard Tete Einstein Albert s second son 8 See also 9 References 10 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology EditEinstein English ˈ aɪ n s t aɪ n EYEN styne German ˈaɪnʃtaɪn listen i is either a German habitational surname from various places named with a Middle High German derivative of the verb einsteinen to enclose surround with stone or a Jewish Ashkenazic adaptation of the German name or else an ornamental name using the ending stein stone 3 Pauline Koch Albert s mother EditPauline Einstein nee Koch nbsp Born 1858 02 08 8 February 1858Cannstatt Kingdom of WurttembergDied20 February 1920 1920 02 20 aged 62 Berlin Free State of Prussia Weimar RepublicSpouseHermann EinsteinChildrenAlbert Einstein Maja EinsteinParent s Julius Derzbacher Jette BernheimerPauline Einstein nee Koch 8 February 1858 20 February 1920 was the mother of the physicist Albert Einstein She was born in Cannstatt Kingdom of Wurttemberg 4 She was Jewish and had an older sister Fanny and two older brothers Jacob and Caesar Her parents were Julius Doerzbacher who had adopted the family name Koch in 1842 and Jette Bernheimer They were married in 1847 Pauline s father was from Jebenhausen now part of the city of Goppingen and grew up in modest economic circumstances Later he lived in Cannstatt and together with his brother Heinrich made a considerable fortune in the corn trade They even became Royal Wurttemberg Purveyor to the Court Their mother was from Cannstatt and was a quiet and caring person Early life Edit At 18 years old Pauline married the merchant Hermann Einstein who lived in Ulm They married in Cannstatt on 8 August 1876 After the wedding the young couple lived in Ulm where Hermann became joint partner in a bed feathers company Their son Albert was born on 14 March 1879 5 On the initiative of Hermann s brother Jakob the family moved to Munich in the summer of 1880 where the two brothers together founded an electrical engineering company called 6 Einstein amp Cie The second child of Hermann and Pauline their daughter Maria called Maja was born in Munich on 18 November 1881 Pauline Einstein was a well educated and quiet woman who had an inclination for the arts She was a talented and dedicated piano player She made Albert begin violin lessons at the age of five 7 Business problems Edit The factory of Hermann and Jakob was moved to Pavia Italy in 1894 Hermann Maria and Pauline moved to Milan in the same year and one year later moved to Pavia Albert stayed with relatives in Munich to continue his education there Unfortunately the business was unsuccessful and the brothers had to abandon their factory in 1896 Though Hermann had lost most of his money he founded without his brother another electrical engineering company in Milan This time business was better However Hermann s health had deteriorated and he died of heart failure in Milan on 10 October 1902 After Hermann Edit In 1903 Pauline went to live with her sister Fanny and her husband Rudolf Einstein a first cousin of Hermann in Hechingen Wurttemberg Fanny s daughter Elsa was to become the second wife of Albert in 1919 In 1910 Pauline moved with her sister Fanny and her family to Berlin She took on a job as housekeeper in Heilbronn Kingdom of Wurttemberg in 1911 She lived with her brother Jacob Koch in Zurich and from 1915 in Heilbronn again Death Edit During World War I Pauline fell ill with cancer In 1918 when visiting her daughter Maria and son in law Paul Winteler in Luzern Pauline was taken to the sanatorium Rosenau due to her illness At the end of 1919 Albert took his terminally ill mother out of the sanatorium in Luzern and brought her to Haberlandstrasse 5 Berlin to stay with him and his second wife Elsa where she later died that year Hermann Einstein Albert s father EditHermann Einstein nbsp Born 1847 08 30 30 August 1847Buchau Kingdom of WurttembergDied10 October 1902 1902 10 10 aged 55 Milan Kingdom of ItalyNationalitySubject of Kingdom of Wurttemberg 1847 1894 Subject of Kingdom of Italy 1894 1902 Occupation s Scientific utility salesman electricianSpousePauline KochChildrenAlbert Einstein Maja EinsteinParent s Abraham Einstein Helene MoosRelativesHans Albert Einstein grandson Lieserl Einstein granddaughter Eduard Einstein grandson Hermann Einstein 30 August 1847 10 October 1902 was the father of Albert Einstein He was Ashkenazi Jewish Early life Edit nbsp Abraham and Helene EinsteinHermann Einstein was born in Buchau Kingdom of Wurttemberg to Abraham Einstein and Helene Moos 3 July 1814 20 August 1887 He had six siblings 8 Raphael 3 December 1839 15 January 1842 male Jette 13 January 1844 7 January 1905 female Heinrich 12 October 1845 16 November 1877 male August Ignaz 23 December 1849 14 April 1911 male Jakob 25 November 1850 1912 male Friederike Rika 15 March 1855 17 June 1938 femaleAt the age of 14 Hermann attended the secondary school in the regional capital Stuttgart and was academically successful He had a strong affection for mathematics and would have liked to study in this or a related area but as the financial situation of the family precluded further education he decided to become a merchant and began an apprenticeship in Stuttgart Marriage to Pauline Edit Hermann married 18 year old Pauline Koch in Cannstatt Kingdom of Wurttemberg on 8 August 1876 After their wedding the young couple lived in Ulm where Hermann became joint partner in the feather bed shop of his cousins Moses and Hermann Levi In Ulm their eldest son Albert was born on 14 March 1879 On the initiative of Hermann s brother Jakob the family moved to Munich in the summer of 1880 There the two brothers founded the electrical engineering company Einstein amp Cie with Hermann being the merchant and Jakob the technician The second child of Hermann and Pauline their daughter Maria called Maja was born in Munich on 18 November 1881 Work Edit The Einsteins electrical firm manufactured dynamos and electrical meters based on direct current They were instrumental in bringing electricity to Munich In 1885 they won the contract that provided DC lights to illuminate the Oktoberfest for the first time In 1893 the Einstein brothers lost a bid on a contract for the electrification of Munich to Schukert Hermann and Jakob s small company lacked the capital to convert their equipment over from the direct current DC standard to the more efficient alternating current AC standard being used by Schukert 9 Their fortunes took a downward turn from there They were forced to sell their Munich factory and in search of business the two brothers moved their company to Pavia Italy in 1894 Hermann Pauline and Maja moved to Milan in the same year and one year later moved to Pavia Albert stayed with relatives in Munich to continue his education there though he spent time in Pavia as well 10 Due to poor business Hermann and Jakob had to abandon their factory in 1896 11 Though Hermann had lost most of their money he founded another electrical engineering company in Milan this time without his brother He was supported financially by his relative Rudolf Einstein in this venture 12 Death Edit Hermann Einstein died of heart failure in Milan in 1902 His grave is in Civico Mausoleo Palanti inside Cimitero Monumentale di Milano Hermann Einstein was 55 years old when he died Maria Maja Einstein Albert s younger sister EditMaria Maja Einstein nbsp Maria Maja Einstein in the 1900sBornMaria Einstein 1881 11 18 18 November 1881Munich Kingdom of Bavaria German EmpireDied25 June 1951 1951 06 25 aged 69 Princeton New Jersey United StatesNationalityGerman Swiss AmericanOccupationDoctorPartnerPaul WintelerParent s Hermann Einstein Pauline KochRelativesAlbert Einstein brother Maria Maja Einstein 18 November 1881 25 June 1951 and her older brother Albert were the two children of Hermann Einstein and Pauline Einstein nee Koch who had moved from Ulm to Munich in June 1881 when Albert was one 13 There Hermann and his brother Jakob had founded Einstein amp Cie an electrical engineering company 14 nbsp Maja and Albert c 1886 nbsp Maja and Albert c 1893She attended elementary school in Munich from 1887 to 1894 She then moved with her parents to Milan where she attended the German International School Albert had stayed behind with relatives in Munich to complete his schooling From 1899 to 1902 she attended a workshop for teachers in Aarau After she passed her final exams she studied Romance languages and literature in Berlin Bern and Paris In 1909 she graduated from the University of Bern her dissertation was entitled Contribution to the Tradition of the Chevalier au Cygne and the Enfances Godefroi In the year following her graduation she married Paul Winteler but they were to be childless The young couple moved to Luzern in 1911 where Maja s husband had found a job In 1922 they moved to Colonnata near Florence in Italy 15 After the Italian leader Benito Mussolini introduced anti Semitic laws in Italy Albert invited Maja to emigrate to the United States in 1939 and live in his residence in Mercer Street Princeton New Jersey Her husband was denied entry into the United States on health grounds 14 Maja spent some pleasant years with Albert until she had a stroke in 1946 and became bedridden 16 She later developed progressive arteriosclerosis and died in Princeton on 25 June 1951 four years before her brother 16 Lieserl Einstein Albert s daughter EditLieserl EinsteinBorn 1902 01 27 27 January 1902Ujvidek Kingdom of Hungary Austria HungaryDiedSeptember 1903 1903 09 00 aged 1 ParentsAlbert Einstein father Mileva Maric mother RelativesPauline Koch paternal grandmother Hermann Einstein paternal grandfather Hans Albert Einstein Eduard EinsteinLieserl Einstein 27 January 1902 September 1903 was the first child of Mileva Maric and Albert Einstein According to the correspondence between her parents Lieserl was born on 27 January 1902 a year before her parents married in Ujvidek Austria Hungary present day Novi Sad Serbia and was cared for by her mother for a short time while Einstein worked in Switzerland before Maric joined him there without the child Lieserl s existence was unknown to biographers until 1986 when a batch of letters between Albert and Mileva Maric was discovered by Hans Albert Einstein s daughter Evelyn Maric had hoped for a girl while Einstein would have preferred a boy In their letters they called the unborn child Lieserl when referring to a girl or Hanserl if a boy Both Lieserl and Hanserl were diminutives of the common German names Liese short for Elizabeth and Hans The first reference to Maric s pregnancy was found in a letter Einstein wrote to her from Winterthur probably on 28 May 1901 letter 36 asking twice about the boy and our little son 17 whereas Maric s first reference was found in her letter of 13 November 1901 letter 43 from Stein am Rhein in which she referred to the unborn child as Lieserl 18 Einstein goes along with Maric s wish for a daughter and referred to the unborn child as Lieserl as well but with a sense of humour as in letter 45 of 12 December 1901 and be happy about our Lieserl whom I secretly so Dollie 19 doesn t notice prefer to imagine a Hanserl 20 The child must have been born shortly before 4 February 1902 when Einstein wrote now you see that it really is a Lieserl just as you d wished Is she healthy and does she cry properly I love her so much and don t even know her yet 21 The last time Lieserl was mentioned in their extant correspondence was in Einstein s letter of 19 September 1903 letter 54 in which he showed concern that she had scarlet fever His asking As what is the child registered adding We must take precautions that problems don t arise for her later may indicate the intention to give the child up for adoption 22 As neither the full name nor the fate of the child are known several hypotheses about her life and death have been put forward Michele Zackheim in her book on Lieserl Einstein s Daughter states that Lieserl had a developmental disability and that she lived with her mother s family and probably died of scarlet fever in September 1903 23 Another possibility favoured by Robert Schulmann of the Einstein Papers Project is that Lieserl was adopted by Maric s close friend Helene Savic and was raised by her and lived under the name Zorka Savic until the 1990s Savic did in fact raise a child by the name of Zorka who was blind from childhood and died in the 1990s Before his death in 2012 her grandson Milan N Popovic upon extensive research of the relationship between Einstein and Maric rejected the possibility that it was Lieserl and also favoured the hypothesis that the child died in September 1903 24 A letter widely circulated on the Internet on the universal force of love attributed as a letter from Albert Einstein to his daughter is a hoax 25 26 Hans Albert Einstein Albert s first son EditMain article Hans Albert Einstein Hans Albert Einstein May 14 1904 July 26 1973 was born in Bern Switzerland the second child and first son of Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric Hans earned his doctorate at ETH Zurich in 1936 and emigrated to the U S in 1938 He was a long time professor of Hydraulic engineering at the University of California Berkeley widely recognized for his research on sediment transport 27 28 Eduard Tete Einstein Albert s second son EditEduard EinsteinBorn 1910 07 28 28 July 1910Zurich SwitzerlandDied25 October 1965 1965 10 25 aged 55 Psychiatric Clinic Burgholzli ZurichResting placeCemetery Honggerberg Other names Tete Parent s Albert Einstein and Mileva MaricRelativesHans Albert Einstein LieserlEduard Einstein 28 July 1910 25 October 1965 was born in Zurich Switzerland the second son of physicist Albert Einstein from his first wife Mileva Maric Albert Einstein and his family moved to Berlin in 1914 Shortly thereafter the parents separated and Maric returned to Zurich taking Eduard and his older brother Hans Albert with her His father remarried in 1919 and in 1933 emigrated to the United States under the threat of Germany s rising Nazi regime Eduard was a good student and had musical talent After gymnasium he started to study medicine to become a psychiatrist but by the age of 21 he was diagnosed with schizophrenia He was institutionalized two years later for the first of several times Biographers of his father have speculated that the drugs and cures of the time damaged rather than aided the young Einstein 29 His brother Hans Albert Einstein believed that his memory and cognitive abilities had been deeply affected by electroconvulsive therapy treatments Eduard received while institutionalized 30 After a breakdown Eduard had told his father Albert that he hated him and after the father s emigration to the United States they never saw each other again 31 The father and son whom the father fondly referred to as Tete for petit corresponded regularly before and after Eduard became ill Their correspondence continued after the father s immigration to the U S 32 33 Eduard remained interested in music and art 34 wrote poetry 35 and was a Sigmund Freud enthusiast He hung a picture of Freud on his bedroom wall 36 His mother cared for him until she died in 1948 From then on Eduard lived most of the time at the psychiatric clinic Burgholzli in Zurich where he died in 1965 of a stroke at age 55 He is buried at Honggerberg Cemetery in Zurich 37 See also EditGenius a television series depicting the EinsteinsReferences Edit Aron Tanzer 1988 Die Geschichte der Juden in Jebenhausen und Goppingen The History of Jews in Jebenhausen and Goppingen Weissenhorn Germany Anton H Konrad Verlag pp 220 301 334 378 383 Short life history Elsa Einstein Modified from P Hanks F Hodges 1997 A dictionary of surnames New York Oxford Oxford University Press Short life history Pauline Einstein Albert Einstein In The World Wide Web ETH Bibliothek Zurich January 2015 Albert Einstein Biography Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 6 March 2007 Retrieved 28 May 2017 Schwartz Joseph 2005 Introducing Einstein ISBN 1 84046 667 7 Botstein Leon Galison Peter Holton Gerald James Schweber Silvan S 2008 Einstein for the 21st Century His Legacy in Science Art and Modern Culture Princeton Univ Press Short life history Hermann Einstein Archived 8 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Albert Einstein autobiographic writings 1946 Barry R Parker Einstein The Passions of a Scientist Prometheus Books 2003 page 31 Michaels Daniel Sylvers Eric 26 December 2021 Italian Tech Startup Revives Einstein s Father s Power Plant Wall Street Journal Retrieved 29 December 2021 Short life history Hermann Einstein Archived from the original on 8 November 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Christof Rieber Albert Einstein Biografie eines Nonkonformisten Thorbecke 2018 page 78 f www einstein website de a b Short life history Maria Winteler Einstein Highfield amp Carter 1993 p 203 a b Highfield amp Carter 1993 p 248 The Love Letters p 54 The Love Letters p 63 the english translation of the german Doxerl one of the names Einstein used for Maric The Love Letters p 66 The Love Letters p 73 The Love Letters p 78 Lieserl Einstein s biography Milan Popovic In Alberts Shadow The life and letters of Mileva Maric Einstein s first wife Johns Hopkins University Press London 2003 p 11 ISBN 978 0 8018 7856 5 The Truth Behind Einstein s Letter on the Universal Force of Love A Universal Force Snopes com 28 April 2015 Retrieved 19 April 2020 University of California In Memoriam www lib berkeley edu Retrieved 25 January 2017 Short life history Hans Albert Einstein www einstein website de Retrieved 7 July 2019 Clark Ronald W 1971 Einstein The Life and Times page needed Avon ISBN 0 380 44123 3 Barry Parker 2003 Einstein The Passions of a Scientist Prometheus Books New York p 236 Parker 2003 Einstein pp 236 237 Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein 1928 Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein 1944 Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein circa 1933 Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Albert Einstein to Eduard Einstein 1933 Shapell Manuscript Collection Shapell Manuscript Foundation Albert Einstein on Sigmund Freud Robert Dunki 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 2008 german Works cited EditEinstein 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 Highfield Carter Paul 1993 The Private Lives of Albert Einstein London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 17170 2 Christof Rieber Albert Einstein Biografie eines Nonkonformisten Thorbecke Ostfildern 2018 ISBN 978 3 7995 1281 7Further reading EditMichele Zackheim Einstein s Daughter the Search for Lieserl Riverhead 1999 ISBN 1 57322 127 9 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Einstein Family Lieserl Einstein s Biography from einstein website de Pauline Koch s fact file from einstein website de Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Einstein family amp oldid 1172247568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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