Seit 18. August 2010 musst du angemeldet sein, um Seiten in Rodovid (außer der Rodovid Engine) zu bearbeiten. |
Dorothea Schlözer (von Rode-Schlözer) b. 18 August 1770 d. 12 Juli 1825
Aus Rodovid DE
Sippe (bei der Geburt) | Schlözer |
Geschlecht | weiblich |
Gesamter Name (bei der Geburt) | Dorothea Schlözer |
Andere Familiennamen | von Rode-Schlözer |
Eltern
♂ August Ludwig von Schlözer [Schlözer] b. 5 Juli 1735 d. 9 September 1809 | |
Wiki-page | wikipedia:de:Dorothea_Schlözer |
Ereignisse
18 August 1770 Geburt:
Geburt eines Kindes: ♀ Augusta Rodde [Rodde]
Geburt eines Kindes: ♂ August Ludwig Rodde [Rodde]
Geburt eines Kindes: ♀ Dorothea Rodde [Rodde]
Hochzeit: ♂ Mattheus Rodde [Rodde] b. 1754 d. 14 Dezember 1825
12 Juli 1825 Tod:
Anmerkungen
Rodde, Dorothea von – (1770 – 1824) German philosopher
Dorothea von Schlozer was born (Aug 18, 1770) in Gottingen, the daughter of August Ludwig von Schlozer, the noted lawyer and historian. She studied geometry early in childhood, and became proficient in many languages. Such was her education that Dorothea was granted a doctorate in philosophy (1787) from the University of Gottingen after a verbal examination, becoming the first German woman to achieve such a distinction. She was married (1792) to the Baron von Rodde of Lubeck, to whom she bore three children. Dorothea established her own salon in Lubeck which was visited by the noted translator Johann Heinrich Voss, and the French scholar Charles de Villers. Dorothea von Rodde died (July 12, 1825) aged fifty-four, in Avignon, Provence, France.
Dorothea Schlozer differed from most learned women of the time who were thought of as neurotic and unfashionable. Schlozer was much more presentable. She knew how to sew and knit and understood how to run a household well.[2] She married a wealthy established merchant, Senator Mattheus Rodde in Luebeck in 1792 by whom she had three children. Henceforth, she wrote under the name of Rodde-Schlözer, the first use of the double surname in German. Their home became a centre for social and intellectual life attracting visitors from all over Germany and France.[1] Later in life she studied art in Paris and achieved a high standard. She was commissioned to paint a portrait of Kaiser Franz. She entered into a relationship with the French writer Charles Villers (1765–1815), in 1794 and lived semi publicly in a ménage à trois with her husband and Villers.
In 1810 her husband's business was declared bankrupt and he went into premature senility. This blow was followed by the death of Villers and two of her children. Weak with disease herself she moved to Avignon, France, seeking a mider climate and hoping to save the life of her only surviving daughter. She died there of pneumonia in 1825 aged fiftyfive.
Von Großeltern zu Enkelkinder