Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Marion Dönhoff

Encyclopedia : M : MA : MAR : Marion Dönhoff



 

Marion Hedda Ilse Gräfin Dönhoff (December 2, 1909March 11, 2002) was a German journalist who participated in the resistance against Hitler's National Socialists with Helmuth James Graf von Moltke, Peter Yorck von Wartenburg, and Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg. After the war, she became one of leading German journalists and intellectuals.

Biography

Dönhoff was born to an aristocratic family in Friedrichstein, East Prussia in 1909. Dönhoff's father was a diplomat and politician in Königsberg (present-day Kaliningrad) in East Prussia. Her mother was lady-in-waiting to Augusta Victoria the wife of the last German Kaiser, Wilhelm II.

As a young woman, she studied economics at Frankfurt, where National Socialist sympathizers were said to have called her the "red countess" for her defiance once they gained power in 1933. She left Germany soon after, moving to Basel, Switzerland, where she earned her doctorate. But she returned to her family home in 1938, and joined the resistance movement, which led to questioning by the Gestapo after a failed assassination attempt on Hitler in 1944. Though many of her fellow resistance activists were executed, she was released. While she had secretly helped to develop the organization of the government that was to take over in East Prussia once the resistance succeeded in removing Hitler, her name was not found in any of the documents seized by the Nazis. Out of modesty she had not presumed to have herself included, which modesty ended up saving her.

In January 1945, as Soviet troops rolled into the region, Dönhoff fled East Prussia, travelling seven weeks on horseback before reaching Hamburg. She recounted her journey in a 1962 book of essays recollecting her beloved homeland in what today is northeastern Poland. Despite her deep emotional attachment to the region where she grew up, she was one of the first public figures to endorse the finality of the border between Germany and Poland established after the Second World War.

In 1946, Dönhoff joined the fledgling intellectual weekly Die Zeit as political editor, was promoted to deputy editor-in-chief in 1955, editor-in-chief in 1968 and publisher in 1972. At the time of her death, Monday March 11, 2002 at the age of 92, Dönhoff was still co-publisher of the influential newspaper and was widely regarded as a voice of wisdom, tolerance and morality. She was the author of more than twenty books, including political and historical analyses of Germany as well as commentary on U.S. foreign policy. Among many international distinctions, Dönhoff was awarded honorary doctorates by Columbia University and Georgetown University.

Published works

English German

Bibliography

Reference

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: