Rachel Meyer
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Rachel Meyer (Rahel Meyer and Rachel Weiss Meyer; 11 March 1806 – 8 February 1874) was a German writer. Meyer was born in Danzig, 11 March 1806. A few years after the death of her sister Frederika, she married the latter's husband. While devoting herself to charity and teaching, she found time to entertain noted men and to continue her own self-education. The publication of her first book, written while superintending the instruction of her children, was retarded by the death of a son. It appeared in Berlin in 1853 under the title ''Zwei Sclnvestern'', and dealt with the triumph of love over self and was an idealistic exposition of the marital relation. Her husband's business necessitated his removing to Vienna; here Meyer met Leopold Kompert and Ludwig August von Frankl, and here she produced her sketch of Vienna life entitled ''Wider die Katur''. Another work, entitled ''Rachel'' (Vienna, 1859), was a novel describing the life of the actress Rachel Félix. ''In Banden Frei'' (Berlin, 1869), her last novel, was a character study of her friend Lina Davidson. Meyer spent her last years in Berlin, with her daughters. Despite her idealism she was practical, and shortly before her death wrote a sketch of George Stephenson, the inventor, with the express purpose of fostering in her nephew the practical spirit. Meyer died in Berlin, 8 February 1874.


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Meyer Kayserling Meyer Kayserling (also '' Meir'' or ''Moritz'', 17 June 1829 – 21 April 1905) was a German rabbi and historian. Life Kayserling was born in Hanover, and was the brother of writer and educator Simon Kayserling. He was educated at Halbersta ...
: ''Die Jüdischen Frauen in der Geschichte, Literatur und Kunst''. Leipzig, 1878, p. 248–253 *


Attribution

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Meyer, Rachel 1806 births 1874 deaths German women novelists 19th-century German novelists Writers from Gdańsk 19th-century German Jews 19th-century German women writers