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Anna Goldsteiner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1944

Anna Goldsteiner (born Anna Stubenvoll: 17 June 1899 - 5 July 1944) was a Viennese resistance activist. She was executed.[1][2]

Biography

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Anna Stubenvoll was born in Vienna.[3] She was opposed to the incorporation of Austria into an enlarged German state which took place during the first part of 1938, and made her apartment in Pulkau (some distance to the north of Vienna) available to "Schlurf" activists. According to court documents the activists' objectives included 'eternal faithfulness to [my independent] Austria' and 'the forcible separation of the Alpine-Danube Reichsgau from the Greater German state ("Großdeutsche(n) Reich")'.[2]

In December 1943 she was one of 14 members of the group arrested by the Gestapo. They were accused of removing government propaganda posters, preparing explosives attacks and planning to eliminate the Nazi mayor of Pulkau. Anna Goldsteiner faced the district high court in Vienna on 14 April 1944. The charge was the usual one of "preparing to commit high treason and cause military damage". She was sentenced to death,[2] and executed on 5 July 1944.[3]

She is buried in the misleadingly named Vienna Central Cemetery (Plot: Gruppe 40).[3]

Personal

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Anna Stubenvoll married Johann Goldsteiner. The marriage resulted in the birth of four sons.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Saul Eadweard Helias (2011). Anna Goldsteiner. Rupt. ISBN 978-6-13855-530-8.
  2. ^ a b c Reinhold Schachner (7 April 2007). "Lust am Widerstand". Über Schlurfkatzen, Zazous, Swings und Potapki. Verein Sand & Zeit, Wien (Herausgabe und Vertrieb der Straßenzeitung AUGUSTIN). Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d Charlotte Sora Marie Lugmayr-Frantz (contributor of an image of her grave stone). "Anna Goldsteiner". Find A Grave. Retrieved 4 November 2017. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)