Anita Augspurg (1857-1943)

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Anita Augspurg was a lesbian lawyer and pacifist and the most important woman of the so-called radical wing of the first women’s movement, who became known above all for her commitment to women’s suffrage at the beginning of the 20th century. … more in the audio or in the text below

Location A: Monument to the 1st homosexual emancipation movement, Magnus-Hirschfeld-Ufer, Berlin-Moabit  map / route

 Location B: Residence of Anita Augspurg with Agnes Hackerin from 1897/98, Eisenacher Str. 80, Berlin-Schöneberg  map / route

 Location C: shared apartment with Lida Gustava Heymann in the garden house, Kaulbachstraße 12, Munich  map / route

Location D: photo studio “Elvira” with house nearby the English garden, today the American consulate, Von-der-Tannstraße 15, Munich  map / route

Further audio clips including directions:

Image Gallery Anita Augspurg

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She grew up in Verden an der Aller, attended a teacher training seminar in Berlin, became an actress in Riga and Amsterdam and a photographer with her own studio “Elvira” at Munich’s Englischer Garten (Von-der-Tannstraße 15, Munich from 1888). She was unconventional, horse riding through the Englischer Garten in a gentleman’s saddle, was a vegetarian, smoked, rode a bicycle and later a car and had a short haircut. She studied law in Zurich, because women were still denied access to university in Germany, and in 1897 became the first woman to gain a doctorate in law in the German Empire.

She published her first publications as a lawyer from 1895. Her core thesis is that the women’s question is a question of financing one’s livelihood, or as she puts it, a “food question”. Today we would say it was about the gender pay gap, which was 50% in the German Empire. Since only legal changes can improve the situation of women, she demands full recognition of women as equal subjects alongside men and is not open to compromise on this point. She wants to change marriage law, which treats women like minors. In contrast to more militant feminists, she rejected violence and said “We women don’t want to break laws, we want to make laws!”;

She moved to Berlin in 1899 and campaigned for the rights of unmarried women. She went on an educational tour through many cities and gave lectures focusing on family law and marriage rights. At the turn of the century, she calls for women to be abolished as second-class citizens when the German Civil Code is reformulated. One specific demand, for example, was the separation of property.

Augspurg, her partner Lida Gustava Heymann, Katharina Erdmann and Minna Cauer were regarded as the radical wing of the women’s movement, which demanded immediate voting rights for women without compromise. Minna Cauer was one of the initiators of the “Frauenwohl” association and founded the magazine “Die Frauenbewegung”, where Augspurg became a close collaborator of Cauer. After a falling out with Cauer in 1907, Augspurg published the monthly magazine “ Journal for Women’s Suffrage” on her own. From 1912 to 1913, she published the magazine “ Women’s Suffrage” and from 1919 “The Woman in the State” for her feminist, radical democratic and pacifist positions. In her publications, she took a clear stance against the increasing anti-Semitic developments and criticized political grievances.

The women’s rights activists achieved their greatest success in 1918 when they won universal and equal suffrage for women in Germany.

From 1907, Augspurg lived again in Munich at Kaulbachstraße 12a together with Lida Gustava Heymann. In 1915, during the First World War, Augspurg co-initiated the International Women’s Peace Congress in The Hague, at which the “International Committee for a Lasting Peace” was founded. The committee was later renamed to “International Women’s League for Peace and Freedom”. Augspurg is part of the board of the German branch until 1933. Augspurg and Heymann took part in international women’s peace conferences and campaigned against the First World War with leaflets. After a brutal attack by Nazis in January 1923, Augspurg and other women unsuccessfully petitioned the Bavarian Minister of the Interior to expel the Austrian Adolf Hitler for incitement of the people. Hitler attempted a coup months later.

Augspurg never spoke publicly about her homosexuality, probably so as not to jeopardize the fight for women’s rights and pacifism. She was able to live her relationship with Heymann relatively undisturbed; Paragraph 175, which stipulated a prison sentence for homosexuality, only applied to men. She probably wanted to keep her options open, as her homosexuality would have been seen as an illness, which would have weakened her argumentative position for women’s rights. She must have regarded the fight for women’s rights as more important than her discrimination as a woman who loved women.

After the Nazis came to power, Augspurg and Heymann found themselves in exile in Switzerland, as they were on the list of people to be liquidated following Hitler’s request for their deportation. Both were expatriated, their property was confiscated and from then on they lived in exile in Zurich with the support of friends, where they learned to drive a car at the age of 70. Anita Augspurg died in 1943, just five months after her beloved Lida, after decades of loving and working together. Today, the Anita Augspurg Prize for commitment to women’s equality is awarded annually in Munich.

© 2024, Rafael Nasemann, all rights reserved