Marianne Schmidl
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Marianne Schmidl (3 August 1890 in Berchtesgaden – April 1942 in the Izbica Ghetto) was first woman to graduate with a doctorate in ethnology from the University of Vienna. An Austrian ethnologist, teacher, librarian and art collector, Schmidl was plundered and murdered in the Holocaust by the Nazis because of her Jewish origins.


Family and education

Marianne Schmidl's mother, Maria Elisabeth Luise Friedmann (1858–1934), lived in Munich, and worked for the writer Paul Heyse. Schmidl's great-grandfather was the painter
Friedrich von Olivier Woldemar Friedrich von Olivier (23 April 1791 in Dessau – 5 September 1859 in Dessau) was a German history painter in the Romantic style, often associated with the Nazarene movement. Life His father was head of the Dessau Pädagogium ...
, a close friend of
Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (26 March 1794 – 24 May 1872) () was a German painter, chiefly of Biblical subjects. As a young man he associated with the painters of the Nazarene movement who revived the florid Renaissance style in religious ar ...
, and her great-granduncles were the brothers
Heinrich Olivier Heinrich Olivier (2 July 1783, Dessau - 3 March 1848, Berlin) was a German painter, illustrator and graphic artist. Early life He was born to the pedagogue, and his wife, the opera singer, Louise Neidhart. His brothers, Ferdinand and Friedri ...
and
Ferdinand Olivier Johann Heinrich Ferdinand Olivier (1785–1841) was a German painter associated with the Nazarene movement. Life Olivier was born in Dessau on 1 April 1785, to a family of Swiss-French descent. He began his artistic education in 1801 by taking ...
, who were also artistically active. Her father, Josef Bernhard Schmidl (1852–1916), of Jewish origin, was a court lawyer from Vienna and a social democrat. Shortly before the marriage on 23 July 1889, which was vehemently rejected by the Friedmann family, he converted to Protestantism. The Jewish background of her father would prove fateful for Schmidl when the Nazis came to power. Marianne was the oldest of two sisters in
Berchtesgaden Berchtesgaden () is a municipality in the district Berchtesgadener Land, Bavaria, in southeastern Germany, near the border with Austria, south of Salzburg and southeast of Munich. It lies in the Berchtesgaden Alps, south of Berchtesgaden; the ...
, where the family-owned a holiday home. However, she grew up in Vienna and received the best possible education for girls at the time. From 1905 to 1909 she attended the progressive “Black Forest School” of the pedagogue and salonière
Eugenie Schwarzwald Eugenie Schwarzwald, (née Nußbaum) (4 July 1872, in Polupanivka near Zbruch River in Austria-Hungary (now Ternopil Raion, Ukraine)) and died on 7 August 1940, in Zurich, founded the innovative Schwarzwald school. A progressive Austrian phil ...
. From 1910, Schmidl studied mathematics and theoretical physics at the University of Vienna. In the winter semester of 1913–14, however, she switched to ethnology as a major, anthropology and prehistoric archeology as a minor. Shortly before that she had joined the Association for Austrian Folklore and had worked out a folklore topic for the first time with “Flax growing and flax processing in Umhausen”. Michael Haberlandt and
Rudolf Pöch Rudolf Pöch (17 April 1870, Tarnopol, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria – 4 March 1921, Innsbruck) was an Austrian doctor, anthropologist, and ethnologist. Pöch is also known as a pioneer in photography, cinematography, and audio engineering. ...
were among her teachers. In 1916 she was the first woman to receive her doctorate.


Working life

Marianne Schmidl first worked at the Berlin Museum of Ethnology. From autumn 1917 she worked under Theodor Koch-Grünberg at the Linden Museum in Stuttgart as an “assistant for African questions”. After a stint at the Grand Ducal Museum for Art and Applied Arts in Weimar, Marianne Schmidl was unable to find an adequate job for a long time. Michael Haberlandt later asked whether “the two characteristics female and Jewish were an obstacle to filling a position within ethnology”. From March 1921 she worked at the Austrian National Library, with a permanent civil servant position from 1924, as a lecturer for anthropology, science,
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
and medicine. In addition, she continued her scientific research in the field of African cultural history, specializing in particular in basket weaving. From 1926 she worked on a research project on African handicrafts at the Museum für Völkerkunde in Vienna, which was financed by the Saxon Research Institute for Ethnology in Leipzig. In the course of this, she researched ethnographic museums in Switzerland, France, England, Belgium, Germany and Italy and published numerous scholarly works.


Nazi persecution and deportation

After Austria's Anschluss or "annexation" to the Nazi German Reich in 1938, Marianne Schmidl was declared Jewish because her father was Jewish, even though she considered herself to be Christian. She was forced out of her job, and thrown into poverty by the special taxes Nazis inflicted on Jews in order to take their property. Schmidl was forced to sell her family's artworks but was unable to flee. In April 1942, she was deported to the Izbica ghetto in Poland and from there presumably to the Belzec or Sobibor concentration camps. Her last sign of life was in May 1942. The circumstances and exact date of her death are unknown, and she was not declared dead until May 1950.


Art collection and its restitution

Marianne Schmidl is remembered today not only as Austria's first Ph.D. in ethnology, but also because – in the course of the principles for the restitution of looted art formulated at the 1998 Washington Conference – she was the original owner of many drawings by the brothers Olivier and Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld could be made out. After her mother's death in 1934, she inherited the entire family collection of drawings by the Olivier brothers and von Schnorr von Carolsfeld. After the " Anschluss" of Austria in 1938, Schmidl was forced to submit a property declaration on 30 September 1938 for her art collection on which the Nazi imposed special taxes. The special taxes for Jews, the repayment of the funding for their research, and the reduced salary collectively left Maria Schmidl with no choice but to sell the collection of drawings. Her non-Jewish brother-in-law, Karl Wolf, brought the lot to the Viennese dealer Christian Nebehay, who in turn passed them on to the Leipzig action house C. G. Boerner. On 28 April 1939, 19 sheets belonging to Schmidl were auctioned anonymously as “Collection W” (today identified as “Collection Wolf”). The Albertina in Vienna restituted 8 sheets by Friedrich Olivier to the family's heirs in 2013. In 2014, two more drawings by Olivier from the Kupferstichkabinett in Berlin in 2015 two sheets from the Kupferstichkabinett in Dresden were restituted. In 2016 A Branch with Shriveled Leaves''' which had been sold under duress by Schmidl in Austria in 1939, was restituted by the
National Gallery of Art The National Gallery of Art, and its attached Sculpture Garden, is a national art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of char ...
. The NGA had acquired the drawing as part of the Wolfgang Ratjen collection. In 2019 a drawing by Friedrich and another by Ferdinand Olivier were restituted from the
Lenbachhaus The Lenbachhaus () is a building housing an art museum in Munich's '' Kunstareal''. The building The Lenbachhaus was built as a Florentine-style villa for the painter Franz von Lenbach between 1887 and 1891 by Gabriel von Seidl and was expa ...
in Munich.


Publications (selection)

* 1913 ''Flachs-Bau und Flachs-Bereitung in Umhausen''. In: ''Zeitschrift für Österreichische Volkskunde''. Band 19, 1913, S. 122–125. * 1915 ''Zahl und Zählen in Afrika''. In: ''Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien'', Band 45, 1915, S. 166–209. This work (her dissertation) was fundamental to a new approach, which considered mathematics as a universal science, independent of culture and society. She stated that there are rather completely different types and expressions of counting and calculating. * 1928 ''Altägyptische Techniken an afrikanischen Spiralwulstkörben''. In: Festschrift für Wilhelm Schmidt, (SVD), S. 645–654. * 1935 ''Die Grundlagen der Nilotenkultur''. In: ''Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien''. Band 65, 1935, S. 86–125. (The last essay she published) * 2005 (Posthum) ''Afrikanische Spiralwulstkörbe''. In: Katja Geisenhainer: ''Maria Schmidl (1890–1942)'', Leipzig 2005, S. 265–339.


Literature

* * Susanne Blumesberger: ''Verlorenes Wissen. Ein gewaltsam abgebrochener Lebenslauf am Beispiel von Marianne Schmidl''. In: Helmut W. Lang (Hrsg.): ''Mirabilia artium librorum recreant te tuosque ebriant''. Phoibos, Wien 2001, , S. 9–19. * Doris Byer: ''Marianne Schmidl''. In: Brigitta Keintzel,
Ilse Korotin Ilse Erika Korotin (born 1957 in Horn, Lower Austria) is an Austrian philosopher and sociologist. She researched and published on the history of ideas of Nazism. At the Institute for Science and Art in Vienna, she heads the Documentation Centre f ...
(Hrsg.): ''Wissenschafterinnen in und aus Österreich. Leben – Werk – Wirken.'' Böhlau, Wien/Köln/Weimar 2002, , S. 655–658. * Katja Geisenhainer: ''Marianne Schmidl (1890–1942)''. In: ''Zeitschrift für Ethnologie''. Band 127, 2002, S. 269–300. * Katja Geisenhainer: ''Marianne Schmidl (1890–1942). Das unvollendete Leben und Werk einer Ethnologin''. Universitätsverlag, Leipzig 2005, (enthält auch Schmidls unvollendet gebliebene Arbeit über afrikanische Spiralwulstkörbe). * Katja Geisenhainer: Jüdische Lebenslinien in der Wiener Völkerkunde vor 1938: Das Beispiel Marianne Schmidl, in: Andre Gingrich; Peter Rohrbacher (Hg.), Völkerkunde zur NS-Zeit aus Wien (1938–1945): Institutionen, Biographien und Praktiken in Netzwerken (Phil.-hist. Kl., Sitzungsberichte 913; Veröffentlichungen zur Sozialanthropologie 27/1). Wien: Verlag der ÖAW 2021, S. 153–206. doi:10.1553/978OEAW86700 * Katja Geisenhainer: Verfolgung, Deportation und Ermordung: Die letzten Lebensjahre von Marianne Schmidl, in: Andre Gingrich; Peter Rohrbacher (Hg.), Völkerkunde zur NS-Zeit aus Wien (1938–1945): Institutionen, Biographien und Praktiken in Netzwerken (Phil.-hist. Kl., Sitzungsberichte 913; Veröffentlichungen zur Sozialanthropologie 27/3). Wien: Verlag der ÖAW 2021, S. 1553–1582. doi:10.1553/978OEAW86700 * Ilse Korotin: ''„ ..vorbehaltlich eines jederzeit zulässigen Widerrufes genehmigt“. Ausgrenzung und Verfolgung jüdischer Wissenschafterinnen und Bibliothekarinnen''. In: ''Österreichische Bibliothekarinnen auf der Flucht. Verfolgt, verdrängt, vergessen?'' Praesens, Wien 2007, , S. 103–126.


See also

* Aryanization * The Holocaust in Austria * List of Claims for Restitution for Nazi-looted art * Ethnology *
Jewish women in the Holocaust Of the six million Jews killed during the Holocaust, two million were women. Between 1941 and 1945, Jewish women were imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps or hiding to avoid capture by the Nazis under Adolf Hitler's regime in Germany. They were a ...
* Gender bias on Wikipedia


References and notes


External links

*
Blogbeitrag des Lenbachhauses
zu Marianne Schmidl
Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon – Schmidl (Schmiedl), (Theresie) Marianne (1890-vor dem 9.5. 1945), Völkerkundlerin und Bibliothekarin
{{DEFAULTSORT:Schmidl, Marianne 1942 deaths 1890 births People who died in Izbica Ghetto Austrian librarians Austrian ethnologists Women art collectors Austrian women academics Austrian Jews who died in the Holocaust Jewish art collectors Women ethnologists Subjects of Nazi art appropriations Women librarians