Elisabeth Maxwell

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Dr Elisabeth "Betty" Maxwell (11 March 1921 7 August 2013) was a French born researcher into The Holocaust who established the journal Holocaust and Genocide Studies in 1987. She was the widow of the publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell.[1]

Biography

She was born Elisabeth Meynard in Dauphiné, France, to descendents of the Huguenot aristocracy, and studied law at the Sorbonne. In September 1944 after the Liberation of Paris she met Czechoslovakian-born British Army Captain Robert Maxwell, while working as an interpreter for the 'Welcome Committee' which introduced French people to allied officers and they married on 15 March 1945. She then worked as his secretary and assistant in London as he established his publishing empire and bore him 9 children, 2 of whom died in childhood.

In her forties she worked in public relations for her husband's company and campaigned for him in the General Election of 1964. She then gained a BA degree in modern languages at St Hugh’s College, Oxford and was awarded a doctorate aged 60 for her thesis on The art of Letter Writing in France, 1789-1830.[2] Having researched her husband's Jewish relatives who died under Nazi rule, amounting in total to 300 of his "immediate and extended family", she wrote,[2] Maxwell subsequently edited two books on the Holocaust. She was on the Executive Committee of the International Council of Christians and Jews and founded the International Conference on the Holocaust.[3] In 1988 she received the Sir Sigmund Sternberg award for furthering Christian/Jewish relations.

Her autobiography, entitled A life of My Own, was published in 1994. It is believed she knew nothing of her husband's fraud, but his behaviour left her financial resources severely depleted after his death in 1991.[2] She died at the age of 92 in Dordogne, France.[3]

References

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