Pauline Koch: Difference between revisions
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== Early life == |
== Early life == |
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[[Image:Pauline Einstein.jpg|left|200px|thumb|Pauline Koch ca.1878.]] |
[[Image:Pauline Einstein.jpg|left|200px|thumb|Pauline Koch ca.1878.]] |
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At only 18 years old, Pauline married the merchant [[Hermann Einstein]] who lived in [[Ulm]]. They got married in Cannstatt on August 8, 1876. After the marriage the young couple lived in Ulm, where Hermann became joint partner in a bed feathers company. Their son Albert was born on March 14, 1879. 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 <ref>{{Cite book |title=Introducing Einstein|first=Joseph|last=Schwartz|authorlink=Joseph Schwartz|isbn=1-84046-667-7}}</ref> Einstein & Cie. The second child of Hermann and Pauline, their daughter Maria (called [[Maja Einstein|Maja]]), was born in Munich on November 18, 1881. Pauline Einstein was a very well educated and quiet woman who had an inclination towards the arts. When her duties in the household allowed it she was an assiduous and good piano player. She made Albert begin with violin lessons at the at the age of five |
At only 18 years old, Pauline married the merchant [[Hermann Einstein]] who lived in [[Ulm]]. They got married in Cannstatt on August 8, 1876. After the marriage the young couple lived in Ulm, where Hermann became joint partner in a bed feathers company. Their son Albert was born on March 14, 1879. 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 <ref>{{Cite book |title=Introducing Einstein|first=Joseph|last=Schwartz|authorlink=Joseph Schwartz|isbn=1-84046-667-7}}</ref> Einstein & Cie. The second child of Hermann and Pauline, their daughter Maria (called [[Maja Einstein|Maja]]), was born in Munich on November 18, 1881. Pauline Einstein was a very well educated and quiet woman who had an inclination towards the arts. When her duties in the household allowed it she was an assiduous and good piano player. She made Albert begin with violin lessons at the at the age of five. |
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== Business problems == |
== Business problems == |
Revision as of 23:18, 13 May 2010
Pauline Einstein (née Koch) | |
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Born | |
Died | February 20, 1920 Berlin, Germany | (aged 62)
Nationality | German |
Spouse | Hermann Einstein |
Children | Albert Einstein and Maja Einstein |
Parent(s) | Julius Derzbacher and Jette Bernheimer |
Pauline Einstein (née Koch) (February 8, 1858 – February 20, 1920) is the mother of the physicist Albert Einstein. She was born in Cannstatt, Württemberg. [1] She was Jewish and had an older sister, Fanny, and two older brothers, Jacob and Caesar. Her parents were Julius Doerzbacher, who had accepted the family name Koch in 1842 and Jette Bernheimer. They had married in 1847. Pauline’s father was from Jebenhausen, now part of the city of Göppingen, and came from simple circumstances. Later he lived in Cannstatt and together with his brother Heinrich succeeded in making 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
At only 18 years old, Pauline married the merchant Hermann Einstein who lived in Ulm. They got married in Cannstatt on August 8, 1876. After the marriage the young couple lived in Ulm, where Hermann became joint partner in a bed feathers company. Their son Albert was born on March 14, 1879. 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 [2] Einstein & Cie. The second child of Hermann and Pauline, their daughter Maria (called Maja), was born in Munich on November 18, 1881. Pauline Einstein was a very well educated and quiet woman who had an inclination towards the arts. When her duties in the household allowed it she was an assiduous and good piano player. She made Albert begin with violin lessons at the at the age of five.
Business problems
The factory of Hermann and Jakob was moved to Pavia, Italy in 1894. Hermann, Maja 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. The separation from her son was certainly difficult for Pauline. Due to poor business, the brothers had to abandon their factory in 1896. Though Hermann had lost most of their money, he founded (without his brother) another electrical engineering company in Milan. This time business was better. But Hermann's health had gone downhill, and he died of heart failure in Milan on October 10, 1902.
After Hermann
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, Württemberg in 1911. She lived with her brother Jacob Koch and his family in Zurich after 1914.
Death
During World War I, Pauline fell ill with cancer. In 1918, when visiting her daughter Maja 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.
References
- ^ Short life history: Pauline Einstein [1]
- ^ Schwartz, Joseph. Introducing Einstein. ISBN 1-84046-667-7.