Aniela Hebel-Szmak
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Aniela Hebel-Szmak
Aniela is a Polish feminine given name, cognate with the Greek-derived name Angela. Anielka is a hypocorism of this name. The name Aniela became popular in the 18th century mainly due to the Ursulines. People with these names include: *Aniela Aszpergerowa (1815–1920), Polish stage actress *Aniela Tułodziecka (1853–1932), Polish educational activist *Aniela Pająkówna (1864–1912), Polish painter who worked in France *Aniela Zagórska (1881–1943), Polish literary translator *Aniela Steinsbergowa (1896–1988), Polish lawyer *Aniela Cukier (1900–1944), Polish painter *Anielka Elter (1901–1958), Czechoslovak film actress *Aniela Pawlikowska (1901–1980), Polish painter who worked in England *Aniela Jaffé (1903–1991), Swiss psychoanalyst * Aniela Kupiec (1920–2019), Polish poet * Aniela Krzywoń (1925–1943), Polish People's Army soldier *Aniela Nikiel (born 1965), Polish long-distance runner *Aniela Rodríguez Aniela Rodríguez (born 1992) is a Mexicans, Mexican po ...
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Angela (given Name)
''Angela'' is a female given name. It is derived from the Greek word ''ángelos'' (ἄγγελος), meaning angel or "messenger of God". In the United States, the name "Angela" was at its most popular between 1965 and 1979, when it was ranked among the top 10 names for girls. Since 1900 in America, it has been ranked among the 300 most popular names. It has been falling from its peak of popularity, and had fallen to 256th by 2019. The variation ''Angelina'' was ranked as the 69th most popular name in 2008 in the United States, while ''Angel'' was ranked 160th. List of people named Angela * Angela of Foligno (1248–1309) Franciscan, Catholic, saint * Angela Aki (born 1977), Japanese singer and songwriter * Angela Allen, English paedophile convicted in the 2009 Plymouth child abuse case * Ángela Abós Ballarín (1934–2022), Spanish writer and politician * Angela Barnes (born 1976), English stand-up comedian * Angela Barry, Bermudian writer and educator * Angela Bassett ...
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Hypocorism
A hypocorism ( or ; from Ancient Greek: (), from (), 'to call by pet names', sometimes also ''hypocoristic'') or pet name is a name used to show affection for a person. It may be a diminutive form of a person's name, such as ''Izzy'' for Isabel or ''Bob (given name), Bob'' for Robert, or it may be unrelated. In linguistics, the term can be used more specifically to refer to the morphological process by which the standard form of the word is transformed into a form denoting affection, or to words resulting from this process. In English, a word is often Clipping (morphology), clipped down to a closed monosyllable and then suffixed with ''-y/-ie'' (phonologically /i/). Sometimes the suffix ''-o'' is included as well as other forms or templates. Hypocoristics are often affective in meaning and are particularly common in Australian English, but can be used for various purposes in different semantic fields, including personal names, place names and nouns. Hypocorisms are usually ...
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Ursulines
The Ursulines, also known as the Order of Saint Ursula (post-nominals: OSU), is an enclosed religious order of consecrated women that branched off from the Angelines, also known as the Company of Saint Ursula, in 1572. Like the Angelines, they trace their origins to their foundress Saint Angela Merici and place themselves under the patronage of Saint Ursula. While the Ursulines took up a monastic way of life under the Rule of Saint Augustine, the Angelines operate as a secular institute. The largest group within the Ursulines is the Ursulines of the Roman Union. History In 1572 in Milan, under Saint Charles Borromeo, the Archbishop of Milan, members of the Company of Saint Ursula chose to become an enclosed religious order. Pope Gregory XIII placed them under the Rule of Saint Augustine. Especially in France, groups of the company began to re-shape themselves as cloistered nuns, under solemn vows, and dedicated to the education of girls within the walls of their monasteries. In ...
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Aniela Aszpergerowa
Leontyna Aniela Aszpergerowa (29 November 1815 – 28 January 1902), known professionally as Aniela Aszpergerowa, was a Polish stage actress who achieved wide fame in Poland and in the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania. She also took part in the January Uprising against Imperial Russia in 1863 and was sent to prison. Her great-grandson was John Gielgud. Career Aszpergerowa was born in Warsaw, the daughter of Maria Wasińska and Stefan Kamiński from Bolimów. She began her career at the Warsaw Theatre Directorate in 1835 in the comedy ''Zazdrośni w miłości (Jealous in Love)''. A year later she appeared on stage in Vilnius. Then, she worked in Minsk, Lithuania, where she married the actor Wojciech Aszperger. About 1840, they moved to Warsaw and soon afterwards to Lviv, Galicia, where she achieved stardom. She became one of the most famous actresses of her time in Poland and in the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and was particularly associated with the theatre in Lviv, wh ...
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Aniela Tułodziecka
Aniela Tułodziecka (2 October 1853 in Dąbrowa Stara, Kingdom of Prussia - 11 October 1932 in Poznań) was a Polish educational activist of the Warta Society (Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Wzajemnego Pouczania się i Opieki nad Dziećmi Warta). References * Witold Jakóbczyk Witold Jakóbczyk (; 15 January 1909 in Sosnowiec – 3 October 1986 in Poznań) was a Polish historian and professor at Poznań University, specializing in the history of Greater Poland in the 19th century. Publications * * * * Witold Jak ..., ''Przetrwać na Wartą 1815-1914'', ''Dzieje narodu i państwa polskiego'', vol. III-55, Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza, Warszawa 1989 1853 births 1932 deaths People from Wolsztyn County Polish women activists Education activists Officers of the Order of Polonia Restituta People from the Province of Posen {{Poland-activist-stub ...
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Aniela Pająkówna
Aniela Pająkówna (1864, Medyka - 24 April 1912, Paris) was a Polish painter; mostly of portraits. Her daughter was the dramatist Stanisława Przybyszewska. Biography Her father was a coachman. Thanks to the generosity of his employers, the journalist and political activist and his wife Helena (née Dzieduszycka), she was able to study art; first in Kraków with Florian Cynk then, after 1886, in Paris at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi with Carolus-Duran and Jean-Jacques Henner. References External links "Aniela Pająkówna – Malarka z Medyki"by Bartusz Jakubowski @ the Jagiellonian Digital Library {{DEFAULTSORT:Pajakowna, Aniela 1864 births 1912 deaths 19th-century Polish painters 20th-century Polish painters Polish women painters Polish portrait painters Académie Colarossi alumni Académie Julian alumni Deaths from pneumonia in France People from Przemyśl County 20th-century Polish women ...
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Aniela Zagórska
Aniela Zagórska (26 December 1881, Lublin – 30 November 1943, Warsaw) was a Polish translator who rendered into Polish nearly all the works of Joseph Conrad. Life Aniela Zagórska was a niece of Joseph Conrad. In 1923–39 she translated nearly all of Conrad's works into Polish. In 1929, for these translations, she received a Polish PEN Club award. When in 1914 at the outbreak of World War I Conrad had returned to his native Poland for the first time since departing it, he had taken refuge with his family in the southern-mountain resort town of Zakopane. A few days after arrival there, they had moved to the ''Konstantynówka'' pension operated by Conrad's cousin Aniela Zagórska, the namesake mother of the future translator; the ''pension'' had earlier been frequented by celebrities including the statesman Józef Piłsudski and Conrad's acquaintance, the young concert pianist Artur Rubinstein. The elder Zagórska had introduced Conrad to Polish writers, intellectuals ...
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Aniela Steinsbergowa
Aniela Zofia Steinsbergowa, (born on 27 June 1896 in Vienna; died on 22 December 1988 in Warsaw) was a Polish lawyerRobert Jarocki, ''Aniela Steinsberg'', in: ''Polski Słownik Biograficzny'', tom XLIII, 2004–200online/ref> known for her work in defending politically well-known cases. In 1931, she was entered on the list of lawyers, which made her one of the first female lawyers in Poland. In 1934 she joined the Polish Socialist Party. During WWII she was active in the Żegota Żegota (, full codename: the "Konrad Żegota Committee"Yad Vashem Shoa Resource CenterZegota/ref>) was the Polish Council to Aid Jews with the Government Delegation for Poland ( pl, Rada Pomocy Żydom przy Delegaturze Rządu RP na Kraj), an un .... After the war she became a co-founder of the Workers' Defense Committee and the Social Self-Defense Committee "KOR".Kryptonim „Gracze”. Służba Bezpieczeństwa wobec Komitetu Obrony robotników i Komitetu Samoobrony społecznej „Kor” 1976–1981, wyb ...
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Aniela Cukier
Aniela Cukier (1900–1944) was a Jewish painter who is identified as an Inter-War Polish artist. Cukier's village depictions were mostly executed in graphics, for which she is best known, especially her stylistic color woodcuts. She also painted in oil and pastel, but there she dealt with her subjects in a more realistic style. Cukier studied painting at a private school run by Konrad Krzyżanowski, and since 1923 she continued her studies at the Warsaw School of Fine Arts, in Mieczysław Kotarbiński and Tadeusz Pruszkowski's classes. She also studied graphics at Edmund Czerwienski's studio. During those years she also frequented open air workshops in the Kazimierz Dolny art colony. She also visited the Krzemieniec art colony, located in the Wolyn region. Her landscapes with views of Kazimierz Dolny, Wiśniów, and Puck dominated her output and became popular, with some translated to woodcuts. Her work was exhibited in Warsaw in 1938 at the Instytut Propagandy Sztuki ...
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Anielka Elter
Anielka Elter (1901-1958 in Kent, England) was a Czechoslovak motion picture actress who made films in Berlin, Germany and Hollywood. Career Elter was a film star in Berlin before arriving in America from Poland. She had her first success in America with ''The Merry Widow'' (1925). She had an uncredited role as a blindfolded musician. The movie was directed by Erich Von Stroheim and starred Mae Murray, John Gilbert, and Tully Marshall. Elter worked with film producer Sascha Kolowrat of Vienna, Austria, on several movie projects in association with the Berlin Film Manufacturing Company. She was chosen by Elinor Glyn to play the ''Bolshevik girl'' in '' The Only Thing'' (1925). After making ''The Godless Girl'' (1929), Elter concluded her film career with three European screen productions. They are '' Sunding und suss'' (1929), ''Kajastus'' (1930), and '' Fantomas'' (1932). Selected filmography * ''The Merry Widow'' (1925) * ''Sinful and Sweet'' (1929) * ''Fantômas'' (1932) ...
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Aniela Pawlikowska
Aniela Pawlikowska known as Lela Pawlikowska, (11 July 1901, Lwów - 23 December 1980, London) was a Polish artist, illustrator, and society portrait painter who came to prominence in the United Kingdom in the 1950s and '60s. Life Aniela Pawlikowska was born to a family with a rich literary and scientific heritage. Her mother was Maryla Wolska, a Polish poet, the daughter of Wanda Młodnicka, née Monné, muse and fiancée of the painter Artur Grottger, herself a writer and translator. Her father was , engineer, inventor, author on mathematical logic, linguist, an early pioneer of the Polish petroleum industry, and associate of the Canadian petroleum entrepreneur, William Henry McGarvey. Aniela was the youngest of five children. Her older sister was the writer and poet, Beata Obertyńska. Aniela was home-schooled. One of her tutors was a family friend, the university professor of philosophy and psychology and artist, Władysław Witwicki. Aniela ("Lela") Wolska's artisti ...
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Aniela Jaffé
Aniela Jaffé (February 20, 1903 – October 30, 1991) was a Swiss analyst who for many years was a co-worker of Carl Gustav Jung. She was the recorder and editor of Jung's semi-autobiographical book '' Memories, Dreams, Reflections''. Life Jaffé was born on 20 February 1903 to Jewish parents in Berlin, Germany, where she studied psychology at Hamburg, before fleeing the Nazis in the thirties to Switzerland. There she was analysed first by Liliane Frey and then by Jung, eventually becoming a Jungian analyst herself. From 1947-1955 she served as secretary to the C. G. Jung Institute in Zurich, before working as Jung's personal secretary from 1955-1961. She continued to provide analyses and dream interpretations into her eighties. Controversy: Jung's autobiography Controversy has developed over how responsible Jaffé actually was for Jung's late publication ''Memories, Dreams, Reflections''. Current thinking would suggest that only the first three chapters of the published work ...
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