Luise Reuter Explained

Luise Charlotte Marie Reuter, also Louise R. (9 October 1817) as Luise Charlotte Marie Kuntze – 9 June 1894) was the wife of the poet and Low German writer Fritz Reuter.

Life

Born in Grevesmühlen,[1] Reuter was the second of eight children of the rector of the Grevesmühlen town school and later pastor in Roggenstorf, Wilhelm (Gottlieb Peter) Kuntze (1778–1863), and his wife Wilhelmine (Caroline Christine), née Scharff (1794–1859). The parents moved to Roggenstorf in 1818, where the father took over the pastorate and held it until 1858.

As the eldest daughter, Luise had to take on a variety of duties in the large household. From 1834 to 1835, Luise Kuntze attended the in Lübeck. In April 1844, she then took up a position as a child educator with Pastor Friedrich Johann Augustin (1794–1862) in Rittermannshagen.

The Rust family, where Fritz Reuter worked, and the Augustin family were friends, so that Reuter and Luise Kuntze soon met. In May 1847, the two became engaged. On 16 June 1851, they married in the and moved to Treptow an der Tollense. Luise supported the household by giving piano and French lessons. They then lived in Neubrandenburg from April 1856 to 1863, where her husband rose to become an acclaimed writer of national standing. Deep insights into Luise's world of thought are provided by numerous letters to her best friend, the landowner's wife Marie Peters (1822–1897), with whom she corresponded for decades from 1856.[2]

Having moved to Eisenach, the Reuter couple, who remained childless, had an Italian-style villa built below the Wartburg in 1866, which today houses the . When her husband died in 1874 at the age of 76, she had an imposing tomb built for him in Eisenach.[3]

Reuter outlived her husband by twenty years. Her role as wife and executor of Fritz Reuter's estate has been controversially discussed in Reuter literature for many decades, especially with regard to his departure from Mecklenburg. Fritz Reuter had intended the following epitaph for his wife: "She has sown love in life, she shall reap love in death".

The brothers Heinrich (born 1816), Carl (born 1824) and Theodor (born 1828) emigrated to Australia in 1852. The brother Friedrich (born 1832) emigrated to South America in 1852.[4] The brother Theodor Kuntze is shown to have been in the US in the 1890s.[5]

Honours

In 1927, the Lowise-Reuter-Ring in Berlin's Hufeisensiedlung was named in her honour. In 1997, the village community centre in Roggenstorf was named after Luise Reuter. A memorial stone south of the church in Grevesmühlen, erected around 1999 by the Grevesmühlen local history society, commemorates her. In 2011, a street in the Rostock district of was named after Luise Reuter.

Letters

In Fritz Reuter Literary Archive Berlin:

Further letters of Luise Reuter in:

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. https://www.eisenach.info/en/eisenach-erleben/stadtfuehrungen/kostuemfuehrungen/luise-reuter Strolling through the villa district of Eisenach with Luise Reuter
  2. Luise Reuter. A Self-Portrait in Letters. In Reuter Calendar. Leipzig, 1908. .
  3. https://www.alamyimages.fr/photo-image-un-gedenkstein-luise-reuter-ehefrau-des-schriftstellers-und-dichters-fritz-reuter-grevesmuehlen-nordwestmecklenburg-mecklembourg-pomeranie-occidentale-26812870.html Luise Reuter's grave
  4. Cf. Arnold Hückstädt: Fritz Reuter Briefe. Vol. 3,
  5. cf. Morgen-Journal, New York, No. 3111, 8 March 1899, : Inherited and do not know. Fritz Reuter's brother-in-law an abandoned man. Misfortune, hardship, privations his lot. Theodor Kuntze lived in Newark for a while. Now he is wanted for inheritance matters. Lost all his belongings in the great flood of Johnstown, Pa.