Elise Richter, tit. ao. Univ.-Prof. Dr. phil.

2.3.1865 – 21.6.1943
born in Wien, Austria died in Ghetto Theresienstadt | Terezín, Czech Republic

4th graduated woman at the University of Vienna (Dr. phil., July 2, 1901)
1st woman promoted “Privatdozent” at the University of Vienna (1905/1907)
1st woman with the title “ao. Universitätsprofessors” in Austria (1921)

Honors

Ehrung Titel Datierung Fakultät
Commemorative Plaque of Faculty 1981 Faculty of Philosophy

Auf Antrag von Kurt Schubert (Judaistik) und Wolfgang Pollak (Romanistik) beschloss das Fakultätskollegium der Geisteswissenschaftlichen Fakultät im Jänner 1981, die Aufnahme von Elise Richter in die Ehrentafel der Philosophischen Fakultät zu beantragen:

„Elise Richter studierte als eine der ersten Frauen an der Wiener Universität Romanistik, war 1907 erste Privatdozentin Österreichs, 1921 als erste Frau Ao. Professorin. Ihre Arbeiten auf dem Gebiet der Sprachwissenschaft, ihre Befassung mit dem ‚Romanismus‘ sind heute noch richtungsweisend, innerhalb der Romanistik erwies sich E. Richter als Pionier der phonologischen Theorie und Forschungsmethode.“
(Protokoll über die 4. Sitzung des Akademischen Senates am 26. März 1981, in: Archiv der Universität Wien, Akademischer Senat GZ 6 ex 1980/81)

Der Akademische Senat der Universität Wien stimmte dem Antrag in seiner Sitzung vom 26. März 1981 einstimmig zu und die Eintragung wurde Anfang April 1981 beauftragt.

Monument Reliefporträt im Institut für Romanistik 1985 Faculty of Humanities
Gate of Remembrance Richter-Tor 1998/99 Faculty of Humanities
Room Name Elise-Richter-Saal 2003 Faculty of Humanities and Cultural Studies
Scholarships/Awards/Foundations Elise-Richter-Programm 2005
Monument in arcaded court 2015/16 Faculty of Philological and Cultural Studies

Elise Richter was born as daughter of the head physician of the Southern Railway Company (Südbahngesellschaft) Dr. Maximilian Richter and his wife Emilie (nee Lackenbacher) in Vienna. Because girls were not allowed to visit schools regularly, Elise and her older sister Helene Richter (later anglist and theater scientist) received private lessons at home.
From 1891 on Elise Richter was permitted to visit individual lectures at the University of Vienna as a guest student. When women were allowed to graduate from high school in Austria, she was the first woman to receive graduation at the Akademische Gymnasium in Wien 1, Beethovenplatz 1, as external student in 1897. As one of the first women she began to study at the Philosophical School of the University of Vienna as ordinary student in the same year. She took lectures in Romanistic studies, General Linguistics, Classical Philology and German Philology and graduated in 1901with the academic degree 'Dr. phil.'.
Elise Richter was also the first woman, who was promoted to “Privatdozent” at the University of Vienna and got the venia legendi and an untenured lectureship position for Romance language in 1907. In 1921 she was appointed titular associate professor (tit. ao. Prof.) and received an University teaching position for Romance Linguistics, Literature and Phonetics. In 1928 she became head of the department of phonetics at the University of Vienna. She never received the title of an full professor. From the founding in 1922 on she chaired the Association of Austrian Academic Women (Verband der Akademikerinnen Österreichs).
Richter researched on the field of (Romance) Linguistics with an emphasis on phonetics and phonology. Her scientific works also dealt with the psychological basis of the linguistic process. In the area of Language History she researched the internal connection in the development of Romance languages.

Elise Richter was persecuted in times of Nazism as a Jew lost her position and was thrown out of the university in 1938.
Along with her sister Helene, Elise Richter stayed in Vienna. Her last scientific papers (dated 1940 to 1942) could only be published in the Netherlands and in Italy. On Oktober 10th, 1942, she was deported to Theresienstadt, where she died a few months later.

The University of Cologne took possession of the library of Elise and Helene Richter (around 3000 books) in 1942. Since 2005 provenance researches are taking place to reconstruct and restitute the library.
In 1999 an award for outstanding doctoral dissertations and postdoctoral theses (German Association of Romance Philology), in 2003 an lecture hall at the University of Vienna, in 2006 a program for the support of scientific careers for women of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and in 2008 a street in the 21st district in Vienna were named in her honour. A Relief at the Department of Romance philology reminds on the first female lecturer at the University of Vienna (since 1985).

New researches about Elise Richter focus also her sympathies for the Austro-Fascist regime and her aversion against socialdemocracy.

Katharina Kniefacz, Herbert Posch

Zuletzt aktualisiert am 02/27/24

Druckversion