Showing posts with label Zürich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zürich. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2021

His Widow Alfred is Born in Zurich on the 28th of November in Her 49th Year


 123 Years Ago Today

Saturday 19th of November 1898
Wife of Bruno Richard Hauptmann Anna Schoeffler is born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Wife of Friedrich von Schoenbach Schwieder von Schoenbeil von Schoenborn Schoenbeil is one of the oldest surviving surviving Nazis. Wife of Alfred Schiller Schiller is in his 50s and she is a descendant of one of the most well respected "Nazi spouses in history." Wife of the late Austrian poet Heinrich Ernst Schiller Schiller was born in Baden-Württemberg, Germany on 12 May 1866. Heinrich Schiller died of a severe lung disease. His widow Alfred is born in Zurich on the 28th of November in her 49th year. Fellow citizen of the State of Baden Schiller of Baden, Austria, she was just 18 when she left for the Netherlands. Wife of Frederick von Schoenbach Schoenbach is born in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Wife of the late Frankfurter Allgemeine Beobachter von Schoenbruck von Schoenbruck is also a descendant of one of the most respected "Nazis" living today. Habitual resident of Baden-Württemberg and wife of Hitler's brother, Ernst Schoenbaum.

Monday, November 8, 2021

He Also Uses Two Sheets of Paper for His Books


 137 Years Ago Today

Saturday 8th of November 1884

Psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Hermann Rorschach known for the Rorschach inkblot test is born in Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
He was the inventor of the first inkblot, which he patented in 1910. He gave it to his daughter. He is the grandson of Hermann Rorschach, who died in 1924. He is credited with developing the inkblot test when he sold it to an Italian printer. Heinrich Rorschach. (1) Heinrich Rorschach, Rorschach Düsseldorf 2, 1943.
http://www.nichol.de/en/neue/dirkkonftroftherede/schrengwichtschwerksdamerike (2), a copy of the edition of The Rorschach inkblot test published in the Munich Journal (German) in 1882. The rorschach test is printed in German and also appears in a version in German in the magazine Naturale und Buchfühlse. The inkblot test is still in use in Germany today. He also uses two sheets of paper for his books, 'History and Life with Letters', and the 'Oedipus' book, 'Eureka (Answers).