Hanna Countess von Pestalozza (actually Brunhilde Countess von Schlippenbach; * (December 23, 1877, Kissingen — July 15, 1963, Groß Glienicke) was a German writer. She published under her maiden name.
Pestalozza received her doctorate in 1921 with a historical review of coeducation of the sexes in Germany. She advocated the self-determination of woman, also called selfhood at the time. Her textbook Geschichtserzählungen went through many editions.
From 1930 to 1935 she was financially supported by the German Schiller Foundation. In February 1936, it signed a church-political appeal by the theologians August Schowalter and Georg Stuhlfauth to
renew and expand the Protestant Church as a people's church and to enable the fighting parties to unite.
After the end of the war, her writing Ich will dienen (1935) was placed on the List of literature to be discarded in the Soviet Occupation Zone. [2]
In Groß Glienicke, an elementary school is named after her.
Hanna Countess von Pestalozza (actually Brunhilde Countess von Schlippenbach; * (December 23, 1877, Kissingen — July 15, 1963, Groß Glienicke) was a German writer. She published under her maiden name.
Pestalozza received her doctorate in 1921 with a historical review of coeducation of the sexes in Germany. She advocated the self-determination of woman, also called selfhood at the time. Her textbook Geschichtserzählungen went through many editions.
From 1930 to 1935 she was financially supported by the German Schiller Foundation. In February 1936, it signed a church-political appeal by the theologians August Schowalter and Georg Stuhlfauth to
renew and expand the Protestant Church as a people's church and to enable the fighting parties to unite.
After the end of the war, her writing Ich will dienen (1935) was placed on the List of literature to be discarded in the Soviet Occupation Zone. [2]
In Groß Glienicke, an elementary school is named after her.