Düringsfeld, Ida von (1815–1876)
Düringsfeld, Ida von (1815–1876)
German writer. Name variations: Duringsfeld; Ida von Reinsburg-Duringsfeld; (pseudonym) Thekla. Born at Militsch, in Lower Silesia, Prussia, Nov 12, 1815; died at Stuttgart, Wurttemberg, Oct 25, 1876; m. Otto von Reinsberg, 1845.
Poet, storyteller, and novelist, published her Poems (1835) and a cycle of stories entitled The Star of Andalusia (1838) under the pseudonym Thekla; pseudonymously or anonymously, issued subsequent volumes annually; published The Women of Byron under her own name (1845); her extensive travels gave rise to highly prized works: numerous stories, collections of national songs, descriptions of national usages, including Proverbs of German and Rumanian Speech (2 vols., 1872–75) and The Wedding Book: Usages and Beliefs Regarding the Wedding among the Christian Nations of Europe (1871); other works include Skizzenaus der vornehmen Welt (1842–45) and Antonio Foscarini (1850); also wrote eulogistic poem "An George Sand."