Marie Elizabeth (other)
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Marie Elizabeth (other)
Marie Elizabeth may refer to - People * Marie-Elisabeth Belpaire (1853–1948), Belgian writer and activist * Marie Elizabeth Amy Castilla (1868–1898), Australian physician * Marie-Elizabeth Cléry (1762–1811), French harpist and composer * Marie-Élisabeth Gabiou (1761–1811), French artist * Marie Elizabeth Hayes (1874–1908), Irish medical missionary * Marie-Elisabeth Hecker (born 1987), German cellist * Marie E. Howe, American politician * Marie Elizabeth Kachel Bucher (1909-2008), teacher * Marie Elizabeth de LaFite (1737–1794), Dutch translator and author * Marie Elizabeth Levens, (born 1950) former Foreign Minister of Suriname * Marie-Elisabeth Lüders (1878–1966), German politician * Marie Elisabeth zu Mecklenburg (1646–1713), Princess Abbess of Gandersheim Abbey * Marie-Elisabeth Polier, Swiss journalist and translator * Marie-Elisabeth Simons (1754–74), Belgian artist * Marie-Élisabeth Turgeon (1840–1881), Beatified Canadian religious sister * Marie-Elizabe ...
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Marie-Elisabeth Belpaire
Marie-Elisabeth Belpaire (31 January 1853 – 9 June 1948) was a Belgian writer and activist. She was known as the "mother of the Flemish Movement".Schrijfster en mecenas in het katholiek meisjesonderwijs - Writer and patron in Catholic girls' education
''schrijversgewijs.be'', accessed 17 November 2019


Life

The daughter of Alphonse Belpaire and Betsy Teichmann, she was born in Antwerp and grew up in the home of her maternal grandfather Jan Teichmann, who served as governor of Antwerp (province), Antwerp province. Taught by private teachers, she learned several languages and read Romanticism#Literature, Romantic literature written in French, German and English but soon became interested in Flanders, Flemish literatu ...
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Marie-Elisabeth Lüders
Marie-Elisabeth Lüders (June 25, 1878 – March 23, 1966) was a German politician and women's rights activist. Lüders was born in Berlin as the descendant of the 18th century agricultural reformer Philipp Ernst Lüders. Her father was a senior Prussian civil servant. After finishing school in Berlin's western district of Charlottenburg, she took singing and photography lessons before enrolling in a one-year course in economics for women at the 'Reifensteiner wirtschaftliche Frauenschulen' in the Hessian town of Nieder-Ofleiden. Later, she became a social worker for the City of Berlin, responsible for inspecting housings with a view to sanitary conditions. She also worked for various women's organisations, mainly in the field of workers' protection and social affairs. After Prussian universities finally opened their doors to female students in 1908, Lüders was among the first women to enroll at Berlin's Friedrich Wilhelm University (today known as Humboldt University of Berlin ...
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Marie Elisabeth Veys
Marie Elisabeth Veys (born 1 May 1981) is a Belgian judoka is an unarmed gendai budō, modern Japanese martial art, combat sport, Olympic sport (since 1964), and the most prominent form of jacket wrestling competed internationally.『日本大百科全書』電子版【柔道】(CD-ROM version of Encyc .... Achievements External links * * 1981 births Living people Belgian female judoka 21st-century Belgian sportswomen {{Belgium-judo-bio-stub ...
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Marie-Elizabeth Of Valois
Marie Elisabeth of France (27 October 1572 – 2 April 1578) was a French princess and member of the House of Valois. She was the only child of King Charles IX of France and Elisabeth of Austria. Marie Elisabeth's maternal grandparents were Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor, and Maria of Spain, and her paternal grandparents were Henry II of France and Catherine de' Medici. Life Born at the Louvre Palace in Paris, France, Marie Elisabeth was loved by her parents despite their inevitable disappointment that she was not the male heir for which they hoped. She was baptised almost four months later, on 2 February 1573 in Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois. Despite the religious and political controversy stemming from the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre (which had occurred only two months before her birth), one of her godmothers was the Protestant queen Elizabeth I of England, who sent William Somerset, 3rd Earl of Worcester as her proxy for the ceremony. Her other godmother and namesake ...
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Marie-Élisabeth Turgeon
Marie-Élisabeth Turgeon (7 February 1840 – 17 August 1881), born as ''Élisabeth Turgeon'', was a Canadian religious sister and the founder of the Sisters of Our Lady of the Rosary. She assumed the name ''Marie-Élisabeth'' as her religious name. Turgeon was cleared for beatification in 2014 after a miracle that had found to have been attributed to her intercession was cleared. She was beatified on 26 April 2015 in Canada by Cardinal Angelo Amato on behalf of Pope Francis. Biography Turgeon was born in 1840 as one of nine children to Louis-Marc Turgeon and Angèle Labrecque. As a child, she made frequent visits to the church and felt a religious call which solidified as she grew older. Turgeon's father died when she was 15 and she remained in the care of her mother during this time. She would graduate from the Laval Normal School in Quebec in 1862 and taught at several schools after her graduation in places like Saint-Romuald and Saint-Roch. On 3 April 1875 at the invitati ...
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Marie-Elisabeth Simons
Marie-Elisabeth Simons (1754–1774) was a painter and miniaturist from the Austrian Netherlands. She foremost painted miniature portraits, fruits, flowers and insect Insects (from Latin ') are Hexapoda, hexapod invertebrates of the class (biology), class Insecta. They are the largest group within the arthropod phylum. Insects have a chitinous exoskeleton, a three-part body (Insect morphology#Head, head, ...s. She was the daughter of painter Jean-Baptiste Simons. References Biographie Nationale Tome 22 1754 births 1774 deaths Painters from the Austrian Netherlands 18th-century women painters {{Flemish-painter-stub ...
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Marie-Elisabeth Polier
Marie-Elisabeth Polier (1742-1817), known as the Chanoinesse of Heiliggrabben, was a Swiss journalist and translator. Life Marie-Elisabeth Polier was born in 1742 in Lausanne. She was the daughter of Georges Polier, a colonel in the service of Hanover, and bilingual in French and German. Her sister Jeanne-Louise-Antoinette (or Eléonore) Polier also pursued literary activity, as did two other cousins: Isabelle de Montolieu and Isabelle's sister Nanette. Polier took up a religious vocation, as ''Chanoinesse'' (canoness) of the Reformed Order of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre in Prussia. In the 1790s Polier edited the literary periodical ''Journal littéraire de Lausanne''. (Sources vary as to the precise timespan of this editorship: either 1794 to 1798, or 1793 to 1800.) Polier collaborated with Joseph de Maimieux to edit various periodicals: the ''Bibliothèque germanique'' (1800–0), the ''Midi industrieux'', and the ''Gazette brittanique''. She later collaborated with her c ...
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Marie Elisabeth Zu Mecklenburg
Marie Elisabeth, Duchess of Mecklenburg (24 March 1646 - 27 April 1713) was a princess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. In 1712, following the unplanned late pregnancy and ensuing resignation of the formidable incumbent, Henriette Christine of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel, Marie Elisabeth became Princess Abbess of Gandersheim Abbey, but she died the next year. Biography Marie Elisabeth was the fourth child from the second marriage of Adolf Frederick I, Duke of Mecklenburg. Her mother, Marie Katharina (1616–1665), was the elder daughter of Julius Ernst, Duke of Brunswick-Dannenberg (1571–1636). After her elder sister, Christina, became Abbess of Gandersheim in 1681, Marie Elisabeth received the consolation of a lesser appointment on 18 December 1682, as Canoness at the Imperial free and secular rotestant, so not under monastic vows, but nevertheless godlyfoundation of Gandersheim She was elected dean (''Dekanin'') on 24 November 1685, which meant she was deputy to the abbess. Howe ...
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Marie Elizabeth Levens
Maria Elizabeth (Marie) Levens (born 13 July 1950) is a politician who held the post of Foreign Minister of Suriname for five years (2000–2005). On 16 July 2020, Levens became the Minister of Education, Science & Culture. Biography Levens first studied at the Pedagogical Institute in Suriname, continued to study at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and received her doctorate from the University of Amsterdam. In 1977, she returned to Suriname to teach at the Pedagogical Institute. After having worked in education she joined the board of the Anton de Kom University of Suriname and contributed to the establishment of the school of Educational Sciences. The Institute of Quality Assurance at the University was her initiative; she became the first director of that institute and contributed to the national and regional Caribbean movement on the establishment of legislation and mechanisms on accreditation. She was the director of the Scholarship Program in Suriname negotiating with un ...
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Marie Elizabeth Amy Castilla
Marie Elizabeth Amy Castilla (26 September 1868 – 9 November 1898), known as Amy Castilla, was an Australian medical doctor and journalist. With a group of other women doctors, she was one of the founding members of the Queen Victoria Hospital, Melbourne. Early life and education Born in Melbourne, Castilla was the daughter of May or Mary (née Robertson) and Frederic Ramos de Castilla, a Spanish-born merchant. Her sister, Ethel Castilla, was a poet and correspondent for ''The Sydney Mail'', the ''Daily Telegraph'', and ''The Herald and Weekly Times''. After she completed her matriculation examination at Methodist Ladies’ College in January 1886, she qualified for entry to Melbourne Universitybut her family couldn’t afford the fees for a medical degree, so instead she did a shorter nursing certificate course, training at the Alfred Hospital while she saved money for her degree course. At a time when opposition to female doctors was still strong, Castilla was one of ...
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Marie Elizabeth De LaFite
Marie Elizabeth de LaFite (1737–1794) was a translator and author who worked as a Dutch governess before serving Queen Charlotte of England during the tumultuous years of the French Revolution. Personal life She was born in Hamburg, Holy Roman Empire on 21 August 1737, to Jean Alexandre Boué and Marie-Elisabeth Cottin. She traveled for many years and in 1768 she married Jean-Daniel de La Fite (1719–1781), the Huguenot minister of the Walloon Church at The Hague. Jean-Daniel was also chaplain to the house of Orange for over a decade. In 1770, she gave birth to a girl, Marguerite Emelie Elise, and in 1773, had a son, Henri François Alexandre. In the same year her son was born, Marie Elizabeth de LaFite began her literary career by translating the German Mlle de Sternheim, by Sophie da La Roche, into French. While this was her first published work, LaFite had previously helped her husband create a scholarly periodical which focused on health and wellness for the poor called ' ...
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