Jeanette Wohl

Jeanette welfare ( born October 16, 1783 in Frankfurt am Main, † November 27, 1861 in Paris) was the long-time intimate friend and correspondent of Ludwig Borne.

Life

Ludwig Borne learned Jeanette know well in 1816 and two made a life- long-lasting friendship. He read to her from his writings and led her with a lively correspondence. In her letters she took large part in his social life and also influenced him greatly in his literary career, she encouraged him to Paris' letters. It was only at her insistence used Boerne those correspondence not begun to publish and documented for posterity so that feelings and thoughts that occupied him at that time.

Although Jeanette welfare was divorced after a short marriage and Boerne initially had more than friendly feelings for her, it did not come to marriage, despite his urgings between them. This probably prevented Borne common diseases and the diversity of the denomination, because her mother was Orthodox Jewish.

On October 7, 1832 she married instead with Salomon bouquet of Frankfurt am Main, the friendship with Borne was, however, in spite of the first resistor her husband to never. Until his death in Boerne even lived in their home in Paris and Auteuil. Heinrich Heine commented pointedly on this triangular relationship by Boerne's death in his book Heine Boerne. Strauss later claimed publicly that he had Heine hit in the face, whereupon he challenged him to a duel with pistols.

Jeanette was well used by Boerne heiress of all his literary property rights. Supported by her husband, she took over the publication of the estate and Bassermann in Mannheim has published six book volumes. She founded with her husband, a fund in honor of Borne and used his memory until her death. Her grave is in the cemetery Père Lachaise.

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