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Else von Richthofen

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Name
  
Else Richthofen

Siblings
  
Frieda Lawrence


Nephews
  
Charles Montague Weekley

Else von Richthofen media0faznetppmediaaktuellpolitikpolitische

Died
  
December 22, 1973, Heidelberg, Germany

Parents
  
Anna Elise Lydia Marquier, Friedrich Ernst Emil Ludwig von Richthofen

Nieces
  
Barbara Joy Weekley, Elsa Agnes Weekley

People also search for
  
Frieda Lawrence

Else Freiin von Richthofen (October 8, 1874 - December 22, 1973) was one of the first female social scientists in Germany.

Life and career

Elisabeth Helene Amalie Sophie Freiin (Baroness) von Richthofen (also known as Else Jaffé) was born in Château-Salins (France). Her father was Friedrich Ernst Emil Ludwig Freiherr von Richthofen (1844-1915), an engineer in the German army, and Anna Elise Lydia Marquier (1852-1930).

While Else von Richthofen started her professional career as a teacher, she enrolled at Heidelberg University at a time when this was still very unusual for women; she was one of just four female students at the time. She earned a doctorate in economics in 1901 and started to work as a labour inspector in Karlsruhe.

She married another former student of Max Weber, Edgar Jaffé (1865-1921), in 1902 who was a well-known economist and entrepreneur. It was Jaffé who bought the journal Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik of which Max Weber became one of the editors. With Jaffé, she had three children, Friedel (born 1903), Marianne (born 1905) and Hans (born 1909).

Else became acquainted to intellectuals and authors, including the sociologists and economists Max Weber and Alfred Weber, the psychanalyst Otto Gross, the writer Fanny zu Reventlow and others. She started an affair with Otto Gross with whom she had a fourth child, Peter (1907-ca. 1915). She also had an affair with her former professor Max Weber and his brother Alfred Weber with whom she later lived together in the same house for several years after her husband died.

References

Else von Richthofen Wikipedia