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Therese Forster
Marie Therese Forster (10 August 1786 – 3 June 1862) was a German educator, writer, correspondent and editor. Born in
Vilnius in the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth to
Georg Forster and his wife
Therese, she spent her early childhood in
Mainz. Her father was active in the revolutionary
Republic of Mainz, and she and her mother fled the city in late 1792. After her father's death, she was raised by her mother and stepfather
Ludwig Ferdinand Huber. From 1801 to 1805, Forster lived with Dutch-Swiss writer
Isabelle de Charrière and collaborated with her on an
epistolary novel. Until 1826, she worked as a teacher and educator, first at
Philipp Emanuel von Fellenberg's school in
Hofwil and then for several upper-class families. After her mother's 1829 death, she lived with family and educated her nieces and nephews. From 1840, she collaborated with
Georg Gottfried Gervinus on the first complete edition of her father's works, which were published by
Brockhaus in 1843. Therese Forster spent her later years with her niece and died in
Albisheim aged 75.
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