Sneha Girap (Editor)

Amalia Freud

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Name
  
Amalia Freud


Role
  
Sigmund Freud's mother

Amalia Freud httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb7

Died
  
September 12, 1930, Vienna, Austria

Spouse
  
Jacob Freud (m. 1855–1896)

Children
  
Sigmund Freud, Esther Adolfine Freud

Grandchildren
  
Anna Freud, Edward Bernays, Ernst L. Freud

Great grandchildren
  
Lucian Freud, Anne Bernays, Clement Freud

Similar People
  
Sigmund Freud, Martha Bernays, Anna Freud, Edward Bernays

Psychobitches amalia freud


Amalia Nathansohn Freud (18 August 1835 – 12 September 1930) was the third wife of Jacob Freud and mother of Sigmund Freud. She was born Amalia Nathansohn in Brody, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria and grew up in Odessa, Kherson Governorate where her mother was from (both cities located in modern Ukraine since 1939).

Contents

Amalia Freud httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen775Fre

Amalia Freud died in Vienna, First Austrian Republic at the age of 95 from tuberculosis.

Children

Amalia was 20 years of age when she gave birth to Sigmund (6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) (named Sigismund).

Amalia went on to give birth to seven more children (Julius, Anna, Rosa, Marie, Adolfine, Paula and Alexander), born in the following order:

  • Julius (April 1857 – December 1857)
  • Anna (December 31, 1858 – March 11, 1955)
  • Regine Debora (Rosa) (March 21, 1860 – deported to Treblinka September 23, 1942)
  • Marie (Mitzi) (March 22, 1861 – deported to Treblinka September 23, 1942)
  • Esther Adolfine (Dolfi) (July 23, 1862 – Theresienstadt February 5, 1943)
  • Pauline Regine (Pauli) (May 3, 1864 – deported to Treblinka September 23, 1942)
  • Alexander Gotthold Efraim (April 19, 1866 – April 23, 1943)
  • Character

    Amalia was considered by her grandchildren to be an intelligent, strong-willed, quick-tempered but egotistical personality. Ernest Jones saw her as lively and humorous, with a strong attachment to her eldest son whom she called "mein goldener Sigi".

    Relationship with eldest son

    Just as Amalia idolised her eldest son, so there is evidence that the latter in turn idealised his mother, whose domineering hold over his life he never fully analysed. Late in life he would term the mother-son relationship "the most perfect, the most free from ambivalence of all human relationships. A mother can transfer to her son the ambition she has been obliged to suppress in herself". His tendency to split off and repudiate hostile elements in the relationship would be repeated with significant figures in his life such as his fiancee and Wilhelm Fliess.

    References

    Amalia Freud Wikipedia