Anna Catharina Wedderkopf
Anna Catharina Wedderkopf (20 December 1715 – 14 March 1786) was a businesswoman, consultant and feminist.[1]
Life
Wedderkopf was born in Lienzingen (today a district of Mühlacker) as the third daughter of Simon Sidler and Jacobina Sidler (born Geissler). After the death of her father, her mother married Johann Jakob Schmidgall. She operated with both the still existing Gasthaus Hirsch (Inn Deer), in which Anna Catharina was also active.
Anna Catharina Sidler married the 18-year-older jurist Heinrich Johann Wedderkopf on 15 May 1736. Both lived temporarily at Schloss Mühlhausen an der Enz, a castle in Mühlacker. After 28 years of marriage she moved to Dürrmenz after the divorce. Anna Catharina Wedderkopf had considerable money at this time. Due to a law breach, she took the right to apply for the tenancy lease to the supreme ducal authorities in Stuttgart. The auction of the Maulbronn concessions to the monastery office was connected to the tenancy lease. These were awarded annually by bid. She was the only woman in Württemberg who did this. The process was also described as women's revolution at Enz (Weiberrevolte an der Enz). Wedderkopf died at the age of 70 years of wound and burn fever in Dürrmenz (today also a district of Mühlacker). Before her death, she set up a foundation for unsubdued house arms.[2][3][4]
Literature
- Marlis Lippik: Catharina Wedderkopf (1715 - 1786) : Weiberrevolte an der Enz. In: Diana Finkele (Hrsg.): Schwäbinnen und Badenerinnen - Frauenleben in Baden und Württemberg. Stieglitz Verlag, Mühlacker 2004, 3-7987-0375-2, S. 111–113.
- Detlev Kraack, Peter Wulf, Klaus-Joachim Lorenzen-Schmidt: Brückenschläge aus der Vergangenheit: Festschrift für Peter Wulf zu seinem 70. Geburtstag. Wachholtz Verlag, Kiel 2008, 3-5290-2944-0.
Notes
- ↑ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg: Wedderkopf, Catharina
- ↑ Durlacher.de: Die Weiberrevolte von der Enz
- ↑ Muehlacker.de: 1250 Jahre Lienzingen
- ↑ Historisch-Archäologischen Verein Mühlacker: Die Wedderköpfin probt den Aufstand