Anna Lühring
Anna Lühring (3 August 1796, in Bremen – 25 August 1866, in Hamburg) (sometimes wrongly referred to as Anna Lührmann) was a soldier in the Prussian army during the Napoleonic Wars.
Anna Lühring | |
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Born | August 3, 1796 |
Died | August 25, 1866 70) | (aged
Known for | soldier in the Prussian army during the Napoleonic Wars |
Life
The daughter of a craftsman in Bremen, she became keen to join up after Tettenborn's capture of Bremen and the death of Eleonore Prochaska whilst serving in the Prussian Army. Dressed in her brother's clothing, she left Bremen in February 1814 and joined the Lützow Free Corps under the name Eduard Kruse at Jülich. In this unit she participated in the siege of Jülich and some smaller engagements during this. Even after her true identity became known, she remained in the unit until its return to Berlin, where she was honoured for her services. In February 1815 she returned to her parental home.
In 1821, she married Karl Lucks from Altona, and in 1827 he became a citizen of Hamburg. After his death in 1832 she lived alone and poor in the Horn quarter. From 1860 she received a small pension from her hometown of Bremen in return for her services. Today, Anna-Lühring-Straße and Anna-Lühring-Weg in Bremen and Anna-Lühring-Weg in Hamburg-Horn are named after her.
Bibliography
- (in German) Herbert Schwarzwälder: Berühmte Bremer. Paul-List-Verlag, Munich 1976, ISBN 3-471-78718-6, pp. 62–70.
External links
- Anna Lühring in the German National Library catalogue
- Anna Lühring at EPOCHE NAPOLEON