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Lieserl Einstein

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Lieserl Einstein
Born
Lieserl Einstein

(1902-02-04)February 4, 1902
DiedUnknown
Cause of deathScarlet fever
Resting placeUnknown
NationalitySerbia
Parent(s)Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric
RelativesPauline Koch, Hermann Einstein, Maja Einstein, Hans Albert Einstein and Eduard Einstein.
Website[1]
Notes
"But look, it has really become a Lieserl, like it was your wish. Is it healthy and does it cry already a lot?" Albert Einstein in a letter to Mileva Maric shortly after the birth of their daughter on February 4, 1902

Lieserl Einstein (Serbian Cyrillic: Лизерл Ајнштајн) (late January, 1902 – September, 1903?) was the first child of physicist Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić.

Life

Lieserl was born on February 4, 1902, before her parents married. Albert's mother did not like Mileva, so the baby was kept secret from Albert's family.

According to letters exchanged by Albert and Mileva, Lieserl was born in Novi Sad, Serbia, and was cared for by her mother in Serbia while Albert worked in Switzerland.

Lieserl developed scarlet fever in early 1903.[citation needed]

Michele Zackheim, in her book on Lieserl, Einstein's Daughter, states that Lieserl was mentally challenged at birth, and that she probably died of scarlet fever as an infant.

Another possibility, favored by Robert Schulmann of the Einstein Papers Project, is that Lieserl was adopted by Maric's close friend, Helene Savic (Serbian Cyrillic: Хелене Савић), and was raised by her and lived under the name "Zorka Savic" (Serbian Cyrillic: Зорка Савић) 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.

Lieserl's existence was unknown to biographers until 1986, when a batch of letters between Albert and Mileva was discovered by their granddaughter. The last known mention of Lieserl was on September 19th, 1903 in a letter from Mileva to Albert; the wording is possibly telling him about her death.[citation needed] Lieserl was never again mentioned in their extant correspondence.

Trivia

In the fictional Time Traveler's Journal by Ed Masessa, Lieserl Einstein is the narrator who discovered a time-traveling rock and had to erase herself from existence.

"Lieserl" is also a character in the science fiction novel "Ring" by Stephen Baxter.

References

  • Michele Zackheim, Einstein's Daughter: the Search for Lieserl, Riverhead (October 25, 1999), ISBN 1-57322-127-9.
  • Baxter, Stephen. Ring, Harper Collins Publishers, 1994, ISBN 0-06-105694-4