. . . . . . "65258812"^^ . . . "Maria Darmst\u00E4dter"@en . . "Maria Friederike Darmst\u00E4dter (* 22. Juni 1892; \u2020 13. Februar 1943), auch bekannt unter ihrem Ehenamen Maria Krehbiel-Darmst\u00E4dter, war eine deutsche Religionswissenschaftlerin, Mitbegr\u00FCnderin und fr\u00FChe pr\u00E4gende Teilnehmerin der an Rudolf Steiner geschulten christlich-esoterischen Christengemeinschaft. Zudem war sie Dichterin und \u00FCbersetzte aus dem Franz\u00F6sischen. Sie wurde wegen ihrer j\u00FCdischen Herkunft im Dritten Reich verfolgt und 1943 in Auschwitz ermordet."@de . . . . . "1662"^^ . . . . . . . . "Maria Friederike Darmst\u00E4dter (* 22. Juni 1892; \u2020 13. Februar 1943), auch bekannt unter ihrem Ehenamen Maria Krehbiel-Darmst\u00E4dter, war eine deutsche Religionswissenschaftlerin, Mitbegr\u00FCnderin und fr\u00FChe pr\u00E4gende Teilnehmerin der an Rudolf Steiner geschulten christlich-esoterischen Christengemeinschaft. Zudem war sie Dichterin und \u00FCbersetzte aus dem Franz\u00F6sischen. Sie wurde wegen ihrer j\u00FCdischen Herkunft im Dritten Reich verfolgt und 1943 in Auschwitz ermordet."@de . . "Maria Darmst\u00E4dter (22 June 1892 \u2013 13 February 1943), also known under her married name Maria Krehbiel-Darmst\u00E4dter, was a German religious scholar and Holocaust victim. Born to a prominent Jewish family from Mannheim, she was baptised in the Lutheran church as an adult and shortly after joined the newly established Christian Community in the early 1920s. She was one of the community's first and most influential members, and contributed greatly to its liturgy. She was deported to Gurs internment camp by the Nazis in October 1940 and murdered in Auschwitz. Her letters from Nazi concentration camps were published in 1970."@en . . "1056012072"^^ . . "Maria Darmst\u00E4dter"@de . . . . . . . . . . . . "Maria Darmst\u00E4dter (22 June 1892 \u2013 13 February 1943), also known under her married name Maria Krehbiel-Darmst\u00E4dter, was a German religious scholar and Holocaust victim. Born to a prominent Jewish family from Mannheim, she was baptised in the Lutheran church as an adult and shortly after joined the newly established Christian Community in the early 1920s. She was one of the community's first and most influential members, and contributed greatly to its liturgy. She was deported to Gurs internment camp by the Nazis in October 1940 and murdered in Auschwitz. Her letters from Nazi concentration camps were published in 1970."@en . .