Alice Teichova
Alice Teichova (19 September 1920 – 12 March 2015) was an Austrian-born British economist and economic historian. She was considered one of the leading economic historians of modern Central Europe.[1] Her publications included a landmark survey of the international business relations of Czechoslovakia, An Economic Background to Munich, published in 1974.[1] She co-authored her most recent work, Nation, State and the Economy in History (2003), with the Austrian economist historian, Herbert Matis.[1]
Teichova was born into a Jewish family in Vienna on 19 September 1920 to Arthur Schwarz, a watchmaker, and Gisela (née Leist).[1] She was raised in a single room residence in the Floridsdorf district of Vienna, where her father owned a watch shop.[1] The family fled Austria in the late 1930s following the rise of the Nazis and the Anschluss in 1938.[1] Alice, who had obtained a job as a maid in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England, was the first to flee the country.[1] The rest of the family later joined her in the United Kingdom.[1] She met her husband, Mikulás Teich, who became a leading Slovak science historian, at a refugee club in the UK in 1940.[1]
Teichova became the first female professor at the University of East Anglia.[1] In 1985, Teichova received an honorary doctorate from Uppsala University, Sweden.[2]
Alice Teichova died on 12 March 2015, at the age of 94.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Evans, Richard J. (2015-04-21). "Alice Teichova obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 2015-04-26.
- ^ "Honorary doctorates - Uppsala University, Sweden". uu.se. Retrieved 2016-09-10.