Robert Saudek

Robert Saudek (* April 21, 1880 in Kolin, Bohemia, † April 15, 1935 in London) was a renowned graphologist, diplomat and writer.

Biography

Robert Saudek was a son of a bed maker and studied in 1900 at the Charles University, Prague, Leipzig University and at the Sorbonne in Paris. To finance his studies, he wrote plays, essays and novels epigrams. During World War II he lived in The Hague and earned his living as a translator, he was fluent in Czech, English, Dutch, French and German. After the war he worked in the diplomatic service of the Czech government in London. In 1924, he was a correspondent of the Prager Zeitung and founded a graphological practice. Saudek was with the greatest graphologist the time, Hans Ludwig Klages buses and, in a constant exchange of letters.

Literature (selection )

  • Alfred Salm and Robert Saudek: The Tale of the Sacred Wood, publisher of Carl Reissner (1912 )
  • Robert Saudek: Demon Berlin, German Concordia Publishing House, Berlin ( 1907)
  • Robert Saudek: And over us shining stars
  • Robert Saudek: Scientific Graphology, Munich: Three masks Verlag ( 1926)
  • Robert Saudek: diplomats, Dreimasken Verlag, Munich ( 1921)
  • Robert Saudek: Experimental graphology, Berlin Pan -Verlag Kurt Metzner (1929 )

Award

  • Author
  • German
  • Born in 1880
  • Died in 1935
  • Man
688139
de