Karoline von Zöllner – Wikipedia

Karoline Henriette Auguste Johanna von Zöllner , also Caroline von Zöllner (* August 23, 1795 in Göhren as Karoline Henriette Auguste Johanna von Grape ; † October 5, 1868 in Dresden) was a German writer.

Karoline von Zöllner came as a younger daughter and fifth child of the royal Swedish major Ernst Andreas von Grape (1756–1822) in his marriage to (Christiana Elisabeth) Albertina, born by Altrock (1763–1820) in Göhren near Malchow (today: Göhren -Lebbin) [first] to the world, where her father has probably only since the parents’ wedding in 1786 [2] Was the landlord. [3] She grew up in Göhren and was initially taught in the parents’ house. Later she received her schooling in Berlin and Dresden, where she settled. In Dresden she married a royal Saxon captain of Zöllner.

After her birthplace, Zöllner gave himself the pseudonym Caroline von Göhren . She published amendments, stories and novels. Many of their works were aimed at a youthful audience. Your youth writings appeared in the Youth library from Gustav Nieritz, with whom she was known. In old age, Zöllner blind and died in Dresden in 1868.

  • The adoptive daughter. Roman in two volumes. Kretzschmar, Leipzig 1846.
  • Robert. Roman in three volumes. Hallberg, Stuttgart 1847.
  • The quarting. Roman in two volumes. Hallberger, Stuttgart 1849. ( Digitized 1st part )
  • The novel. 1850. [4]
  • Ottomar. Roman from the present time. 3 volumes. Schaefer, Dresden 1850.
  • Victor and Thora. By Carline von Göhren. Novel. Wienbrack, Leipzig 1851. ( Digitized )
  • Members of a chain. Novella. Wienbrack, Leipzig 1852.
  • A carnival in Dresden or Scenen from the life of a Saxon officer. Novel. Literature-Bureau, Leipzig 1854.
  • The stolen child. A tale for young people. Voigt & Günther, Leipzig 1855.
  • The bridal show. Roman in two volumes. Janke, Berlin 1856.
  • Love of women and artists. Roman in two volumes. Verlags-Comptoir, Hamburg 1856.
  • Handicrafts have a golden floor. Narrative. Schlicke, Leipzig 1857.
  • The birthday party or the trip to Java. Narrative for the youth. Schlicke, Leipzig 1857.
  • Christian Wohlgemuth or the inner profession. Schlicke, Leipzig 1857.
  • The orphan or good fact often finds its wages on earth. Narrative. Voigt & Günther, Leipzig 1858.
  • From the salon life. Roman in two volumes. Büchting, Nordhausen 1859.
  • Pictures from a children’s life. Narrative for the youth. Voigt & Günther, Leipzig 1861.
  • Colless, caroline from . In: Elisabeth Friedrichs: The German -language writers of the 18th and 19th centuries. A lexicon . Metzler, Stuttgart 1981, ISBN 3-476-00456-2, (repertories on German literary history 9), pp. 348–349.
  • Goehren, Caroline v. . In: Sophie Pataky (ed.): Lexicon of German women the feather . Band 1. Verlag carl patky, Berlin 1898, S. 266 ( Digitized ).
  • Customs, Caroline von . In: Sophie Pataky (ed.): Lexicon of German women the feather . Band 2. Verlag carl patky, Berlin 1898, S. 468 ( Digitized ).
  • Colless, caroline from . In: Stephan Sehlke: Pedagogues – pastors – patriots. Biographical manual for the print good for children and adolescents of authors and illustrators from Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania until 1945 . Bod, Norderstedt 2009, pp. 425–426.
  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who was in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The person lexicon . Hinstroff publisher, ROSTOCK 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301- S. 11221 .
  1. Not in Göhren (now the district of Woldegk) in Mecklenburg-Strelitz, as Grewolls indicates; Not even in today’s Malk Göhren in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district, as Friedrichs states.
  2. Her parents married on June 12, 1786 in Kesselhain near Borna; The mother had previously been married to Johann Christian von Fick, former Dutch judiciary on Java, and had two children from this marriage.
  3. The Müritz area (= Values ​​of the German homeland. Volume 60). 1st edition. Verlag Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1999, ISBN 3-7400-0940-3, p. 103 f.-At the time of the census in 1819 in Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Karoline von Zöllner still lived together with two older sisters in the parents’ house in Göhren. To the closer family environment see Constantin von Altrock: History of the gender of Althrock. Berlin, 1901, S. 42f.
  4. No copy detectable