Edith Helen Sichel
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2021) |
Edith Helen Sichel was an English author, sister of Walter Sichel. She was born on 13 December 1862, in London, to Jewish migrants from Germany who converted to Christianity,[1] and educated at home by private teachers. She was the writer of: Two Salons (1895); The Household of the Lafayettes (1897); Women and Men of the French Renaissance (1901); Catherine de' Medici (1905); Life and Letters of Alfred Ainger (1906); The Later Years of Catherine de' Medici (1908); Michel de Montaigne (1911); and The Renaissance (1914). She died on 13 August 1914 in Carnforth (Lancashire).
References[]
- ^ William D. Rubinstein, Michael Jolles, Hilary L. Rubinstein, The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History, Palgrave Macmillan (2011), p. 909
External links[]
- Media related to Edith Helen Sichel at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by or about Edith Helen Sichel at Internet Archive
Categories:
- 1862 births
- 1914 deaths
- English Jewish writers
- English biographers
- English women non-fiction writers
- Jewish women writers
- 20th-century English women writers
- 20th-century English writers
- 19th-century English women writers
- Women biographers
- Writers from London
- English people of German-Jewish descent
- 20th-century biographers
- 19th-century biographers
- English non-fiction writer stubs