Christabel Bielenberg (1909–2003)
Autor von Als ich Deutsche war, 1934-1945. Eine Engländerin erzählt
Über den Autor
Werke von Christabel Bielenberg
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The Past is Myself 1 Exemplar
Zugehörige Werke
Die Berliner Tagebücher der Marie 'Missie' Wassiltschikow 1940-1945 (1985) — Einführung, einige Ausgaben — 648 Exemplare
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Wissenswertes
- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Bielenberg, Christabel
- Andere Namen
- Burton, Christabel Mary (Geburtsname)
- Geburtstag
- 1909-06-18
- Todestag
- 2003-11-02
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- Großbritannien
Deutschland
Irland - Geburtsort
- Hertfordshire, England, Großbritannien
- Wohnorte
- Hamburg, Deutschland
Berlin, Deutschland
Rohrbach, Deutschland
Tullow, County Carlow, Irland - Ausbildung
- St Margaret's School, Bushey, Hertfordshire, England, Großbritannien
- Berufe
- non-fiction Schriftsteller
Memoirenschreiber
Journalist - Beziehungen
- Bielenberg, Andy (Enkel)
Bielenberg, Charlotte (Schwiegertochter)
Northcliffe, Viscount Alfred Harmsworth (Onkel)
Harmsworth, Harold Sidney, Viscount Rothermere (Onkel) - Preise und Auszeichnungen
- Commander German Federal Order of Merit
European Parliament Gold Medal of Merit - Kurzbiographie
- Christabel Bielenberg, née Burton, was born to a privileged Anglo-Irish family and won a scholarship to study at Oxford. She decided instead to study opera in Hamburg, Germany, where she met and fell in love with Peter Bielenberg, a law student. They married in 1934 and Christabel became a German citizen. As anti-Nazis, the Bielenbergs were in danger, but they stayed in Germany while Peter pursued a career as a lawyer and civil servant and the couple had three sons. Peter was a close friend of Adam von Trott, who was hanged for his role in the plot to assassinate Hitler on July 20, 1944; after the plot was discovered, Peter was arrested and sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp. Christabel Bielenberg managed to convince the Gestapo of her husband's political naivety and he was sentenced to a punishment battalion but mistakenly released. Peter hid in the Black Forest until the fighting of World War II ended. After the war, Christabel Bielenberg reclaimed her British citizenship. Using her connections, she returned to Germany briefly as a correspondent for The Observer. In 1948, the couple settled in Ireland and bought a farm, where they lived quietly until asked to help with a book about Adam von Trott zu Solz. That prompted Mrs. Bielenberg to write her two-volume memoir, which became a bestseller and was adapted as a BBC miniseries called Christabel.
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From past readings of life in Germany during the war, I knew the there were shortages of food and consumer goods even before the war but to read her experiences of trying to feed and cloth her family brought the difficulties faced by German citizens clearly to the forefront. She also experienced the dissatisfaction of German citizens with Hitler's regime and only the fear of his security forces kept people from protesting although many people fought the system in minor ways.
When she left Berlin to escape the bombing, she settled in the Black Forest among rural peasants where life was improved in that they were able to eat better and live a healthier life but still had to watch out for the snitch.… (mehr)