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Topic: Mileva Maric


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In the News (Tue 17 Nov 09)

  
  Mileva Marić - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mileva was born in Titel in Vojvodina (then in Austria-Hungary, now in Serbia) in a Serbian family.
She was fascinated with a lecture about the relationship between the velocity of a molecule and the distance traversed by it between collisions, and wrote about it to Einstein.
The extent of Mileva's contribution to Einstein's Annus Mirabilis Papers is controversial.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mileva_Maric   (761 words)

  
 Mileva Maric - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mileva Marić (1875 - 1948) was a Serbian mathematician, and Albert Einstein's first wife.
Mileva was born in Titel in Vojvodina, Serbia from a Serbian family.
The other son was psychotic, and Mileva cared for him until she died in 1948.
www.southhouston.us /project/wikipedia/index.php/Mileva_Maric   (739 words)

  
 Mileva Maric - ArtPolitic Encyclopedia of Politics : Information Portal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva was born in Titel in Vojvodina, a northern province of Yugoslavia, of Serbian parents.
At the time of Mileva's death in 1948 her oldest son Hans Albert was a professor in hydraulic engineering[?] at the University of California at Berkeley.
In a letter to Einstein written from Heidelberg, Mileva expressed her fascination with a lecture of about the relationship between the velocity of a molecule and the distance traversed by it between collisions, a topic relevant in Einstein's studies of Brownian motion.
www.artpolitic.org /infopedia/mi/Mileva_Maric.html   (575 words)

  
 Mileva Maric-Einstein   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva and Albert's marriage broke down and ended up in divorce in 1919, after the prospects of the Nobel Prize secured her future with their two sons.
Mileva' life from that time until her death in 1948 was devoted to caring for Eduard.
Mileva Einstein-Maric died on August 4, 1948 and was buried at he Nordheim cemetery in Zurich.
ouray.cudenver.edu /~mrshinn/engr3400/mileva_einstein.html   (782 words)

  
 [CTRL] Fw: SN480:MILEVA MARIC EINSTEIN - Part I   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The marriage was blessed with three children: Mileva born on December 19, 1875 and christened by the same priest who officiated at her parents’ marriage, Zorka in 1883 and Milos in 1885.
Mileva (ca1led Mitza by her family), who was born with a congenital hip displacement, was Milos’ favourite child and he taught her many things so that by the age of seven she was reading, doing simple arithmetic and was fluent in Serbian and German.
Maric’s champions are Evan Harris Walker, a research physicist in the United States Army Ballistic Research Laboratory at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland and Dr. Senta Troemel-Ploetz, a research linguist at the German Research Society in Bonn.
www.mail-archive.com /ctrl@listserv.aol.com/msg36388.html   (2135 words)

  
 Science, civilization and society   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva Maric's father was a land-owner and civil servant in the Austrian-Hungarian empire.
To give Mileva every opportunity for advanced studies her father obtained a special Royal permission to send Mileva to the Royal Classical Gymnasium in Zagreb, a school normally reserved for boys.
Maric and Einstein married in the following year, ignoring the objections of their families, and from then on Maric had the role of supporting wife to a famous scientist.
www.incois.gov.in /Tutor/mileva.html   (683 words)

  
 Introduction to Engineering
Mileva Maric was born to Serbian parents on December 19, 1875 in Titel, Vojvodinae, which is in northern Yugoslavia.
That Albert gave Mileva all of the money he received for winning the Nobel Prize in Physics for 1921 was seen by some as acknowledgement of his intellectual debt to her.
Mileva was a brilliant woman but was also very shy and introverted, reluctant to demand recognition for her work.
ouray.cudenver.edu /~safurman/physics/pme.htm   (699 words)

  
 Objectivism Online Forum > Einstein And Mileva Maric   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
It is clear that Mileva Einstein-Maric was a courageous women, but all of the facts indicate that not only was her ability not up to an Einstein, but it was not sufficient to compete with any of the men in the field.
Mileva's eventual estrangement from Albert Einstein, and the increasing dark moods and personal troubles she had, are fairly well documented.
It is clear that whatever initially drove Mileva Maric towards an education leading to work as a teacher of science, was quelled by the realities of her own struggles, both intellectual and emotional, and she eventually settled into the more traditional role of a woman in that age.
www.objectivismonline.net /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t1503.html   (2184 words)

  
 Mileva Maric
At the time of Mileva's death in 1948 her oldest son Hans Albert was a professor in hydraulic engineering at the University of California at Berkley.
While married to Mileva Maric at the age of 26, Einstein published in 1905 three fundamental contributions to three different areas of physics, a unique event in the history of science.
In her letter to Einstein written from Heidelberg, Mileva expressed her fascination with a lecture of the German physicist Phillip Lenard about the relationship between the velocity of molecules and the distance traversed by it between collisions, a topic relevant in Einstein's studies of Brownian motion.
www.teslasociety.com /Mileva.htm   (500 words)

  
 Read about Mileva Maric at WorldVillage Encyclopedia. Research Mileva Maric and learn about Mileva Maric here!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
psychotic, and Mileva cared for him until she died in 1948.
She was fascinated with a lecture about the relationship between the velocity of a molecule and the distance traversed by it between
The case for Mileva as co-genius mostly depends on letters in which Albert referred to "our" theory and "our" work and on a divorce agreement in which Albert promised her his
encyclopedia.worldvillage.com /s/b/Mileva_Maric   (692 words)

  
 Einstein | American Museum of Natural History
Mileva Marić, of Serbian descent, was working toward a Ph.D. when she met dashing Albert.
Mileva wrote to a friend complaining that science came first, the family second.
Before Mileva agreed to a divorce, Albert sent her this list of "conditions," under which he was willing to remain married to her.
www.amnh.org /exhibitions/einstein/life/family.php   (931 words)

  
 A
Mileva Maric-Einstein was one of the first women to study mathematics and physics - in Zurich, where women were already admitted.
In 1903, besides doing housework and solving mathematical equations for her husband, Mileva Maric invented the 'Influenzmaschine' (influence machine) for measuring low electric tensions; the application for a patent for this invention was also submitted under Albert Einstein's name.
When she was a student, Mileva told her friends that she believed that a woman could make a career like a man and could become a physicist as good as her male colleagues.
www.bmbwk.gv.at /extern/women/f_09_1.htm   (806 words)

  
 Mileva Maric, Great Serbian woman and a victim of jewish conspiracy and supremacy - Stormfront White Nationalist ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Many people even in Serbia are not aware of Mileva Maric and her achievements in science in general and math and physics in particular at a time when women were not expected to be productive members of society.
Mileva not only was doing all the house chores but in letters that would be found almost a century later, it was found that she did all the math for theory of relativity and that original papers were signed Marity-Einstein or Maric-Einstein.
In the meantime, Mileva and Albert were married in 1903 to strong objections of Albert's parents who were strongly opposed to accepting goyim into their family but nevertheless Mileva gave birth to 3 children which were completely ignored by Albert and his family.
www.stormfront.org /forum/showthread.php?t=174560   (622 words)

  
 Print - Short life history Mileva Einstein-Maric
Mileva wanted to study medicine and passed her A-levels successfully at the Swiss Medicine School in Berne in 1896.
The marriage between Mileva and Albert was divorced in 1919.
Mileva continued to take loving care of the ill Eduard who later was treated in the sanatorium Burghölzli.
www.einstein-website.de /biographies/print/p_mileva.html   (596 words)

  
 Mileva Maric Einstein - 'Out From The Shadows Of Great Men'
Mileva Maric, fellow student and first wife of the famed Albert, is starring in one of the hottest controversies to hit the dry, footnoted world of historians and scientists.
Mileva Maric Einstein, described in a popular biography as the "gloomy, laconic and distrustful" Serbian peasant, was due for a comeback.
We can round up generations of wives before and after Mileva whose star faded or was eclipsed, who went from scholar and co-author to typist to a name on her husband's dedication page or his obit or nothing.
www.compuserb.com /mileva02.htm   (791 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Mileva Maric Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva Mari was a Serbian mathematician, and Albert Einstein 's first wife.
Mileva was born in Titel in Vojvodina, from a Serbian family.
During her early years at university, she became an aquaitance of Nikola Tesla as a mathematics student.
www.ipedia.com /mileva_maric.html   (499 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Albert considers Mileva as intelectualy equal and discusses physics with her.
In the Letter 23 Albert says to Mileva that she is his equal.
Unfortunately, there are only 11 letters from Mileva to Einstain and the question is were the rest of them deliberately destroyed to hide the evidence of her work.
ffden-2.phys.uaf.edu /211_fall2004.web.dir/Natasa_Raskovic/letters.htm   (172 words)

  
 Student Searches for Albert Einstein's Wife and Daughter   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva and Albert were lovers as students, and Mileva probably gave their daughter, Lieserl, up for adoption in 1902, apparently because the scandal might hurt his career.
Mileva was devoted to Albert; as a "typical Serbian woman," Dokmanovic says, she would do anything to please her husband.
Mileva did Albert's university homework, gave up her own physics career for his, took care of their schizophrenic son even after Albert divorced her, and was his scientific partner.
www.mtholyoke.edu /offices/comm/csj/961122/ein.html   (456 words)

  
 Einstein-Maric Reunion
Pauline was stubbornly set against Einstein and Mileva's marriage (Illustration 2; view a 1910 simplified "snapshot" of the emotional triangle (the conflict symbol lines between Albert and Pauline Koch Einstein and cut-off relationship symbol between Pauline and Mileva) and Pauline's emotional cut-off of Mileva extended to all of Einstein's children with Mileva.
Perhaps this was especially true in a family where Mileva's mother Marija was comparatively less educated than the father, was not a professional or worker outside the home as well as in, and was probably expected to hold a deferrent and submissive relation to the father throughout Mileva's childhood and throughout her life.
Looking at both Maric and Einstein as people who were deeply concerned about peace, they admired the social expression of love and non-violent social change, but perhaps as a result of the separation and divorce, failed as a couple to fully mobilize themselves and their generation in that way.
www.interpersonaluniverse.net /einfam.html   (12256 words)

  
 Mileva Maric-Einstein
Mileva aveva rinunciato a citare il proprio cognome nelle pubblicazioni del marito, affermando: "siamo entrambi una sola pietra" [una pietra = ein stein].
Eduard si era ammalato di schizofrenia e Mileva restò sola a occuparsi di lui, assistendolo durante le sue crisi che col tempo si fecero sempre più gravi.
Mileva veniva considerata tenace e sistematica, mentre Albert era discontinuo e ricco di idee; il loro diverso modo di lavorare si compensava in maniera ideale.
erewhon.ticonuno.it /2002/scienza/einstein/mileva.htm   (810 words)

  
 Oliver Faulhaber's Homepage
Mileva Maric wurde als Tochter eines mittleren Beamten 1875 in Titel geboren, einem Dorf in der Wojwodina, damals zum ungarischen Teil der k.u.k-Monarchie, heute zu Serbien gehörend.
Darin enthalten ist unter anderem der Briefwechsel zwischen Albert Einstein und Mileva Maric aus den Jahren 1987-1902.
Da es von Mileva Maric aber leider nicht eine Zeile mathematischer oder physikalischer Überlegungen gibt, existiert diese Übereinstimmung nur in der Einbildung der Autorin.
www.oliver-faulhaber.de /einstein/mutter.htm   (1814 words)

  
 Einstein's Wife . Mileva's Story | PBS
The life of Mileva Maric Einstein is a jigsaw puzzle that researchers are trying to piece together - without knowing how the final picture will look.
On the one side, Einstein is a scientific saint, and accepting Mileva as his equal would be blasphemous.
In this brief investigation of the facts, Mileva's life story is divided into three periods, each defined by her changing relationship with Albert.
www.pbs.org /opb/einsteinswife/milevastory   (135 words)

  
 Einstein Exhibit -- Formative Years IV
Einstein's family opposed any talk of marriage, even after Mileva gave birth to a daughter (who was apparently given up for adoption).
Einstein discussed physics with Mileva, but there is no solid evidence that she made any significant contribution to his work.
Mileva and Albert separated in 1914, after bitter arguments, and divorced in 1919.
www.aip.org /history/einstein/early4.htm   (418 words)

  
 [CTRL] Fw: SN481:MILEVA MARIC EINSTEIN - Part II   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Maric’s biographer was a Serbian mathematician and physicist, Desanka Djuric-Trbuhovic, whose U Senci Alberta Ajnstajna was first published in 1969 and has since been published in German and translated into English.
This is the most complete and definitive biography written about Maric and is the primary source about her life consulted by writers and researchers.
The patriarch of the church, Father Teodor Milic, was a famous singer, preacher, political radical, and a personal friend of Milos Maric’s (Mileva’s father)”.
www.mail-archive.com /ctrl@listserv.aol.com/msg36389.html   (1107 words)

  
 Amazon.fr : Livres en anglais: In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric, Einstein's First Wife   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mileva's marriage to Albert Einstein and the birth of their three children (the first, Lieserl, was born before the two were married) derailed her career as a physicist.
Shortly after their marriage in 1903, Mileva slowly comes to realize that science has a greater hold on Albert's attention than she does, and her tragic letters to Helene after 1909 lay bare her anguish at his growing distance (a situation made worse by Albert's secret affair with his cousin Elsa).
After the divorce, Mileva's letters chronicle the depression with which she struggled for the rest of her life, and describe the lives of her and Albert's two surviving children, the youngest of whom, Eduard, had developed schizophrenia.
www.amazon.fr /exec/obidos/ASIN/080187856X   (810 words)

  
 Response to my Einstein bio
Lieserl is mentioned quite prominently in the Love Letters between Mileva Maric (Einstein's first wife and the mother to all his biological children) and Albert Einstein.
He was extremely quick to glom on to Mileva Maric, a brilliant Serbian student, who was the only woman studying physics at the Swiss Polytechnic ("ETH") the entire time Einstein was there.
His first wife, Mileva Maric, for whom he had originally professed such great love, he treated cruelly toward the end of the marriage, even calling her "uncommonly ugly".
www.msu.edu /~mccaske1/writing/eresp.htm   (1941 words)

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