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Lenelotte von Bothmer

Helene-Charlotte (Lenelotte) von Bothmer née Wepfer (27 October 1915, Bremen – 19 June 1997, Isernhagen near Hanover), was a German politician (SPD) and writer.

Biography

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Family, education and profession

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Bothmer was the daughter of geologist Emil Wepfer [de] and Anna-Maria Meyer. She married the teacher Hermann von Bothmer in 1939 (1912–1987), son of the landowner Thorwald von Bothmer.

She studied German Studies, English Studies and History at the Berlin and Tübingen universities. She worked as a teacher at a women's technical school. After the war she worked as an interpreter for the military government in the British sector and as a museum teacher for the city of Hanover.

Politics

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Bothmer joined the SPD in 1945. She was a member of the sub-district executive of the SPD Peine-Burgdorf for eight years. She chaired the sub-district women's committee and the district women's committee of the SPD and was a member of the SPD district executive committee in Hanover and the party council of the federal SPD.

She was a member of the Lower Saxony State Parliament from 1966 to 1967 and of the German Bundestag from 1969 to 1980. She was a member of the Bundestag Committees on Education and Science and on Foreign Affairs, among others. She was particularly committed to peace policy and the fight against apartheid in South Africa.[1]

From 1971 to 1983, Bothmer was chairwoman of the Bund für Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege in Niedersachsen (today BUND). She was the founder of the German-Arab Parliamentary Society and its president from 1976 to 1981.

On 14 October 1970, she caused a scandal because she was the first woman to give a speech in the Bundestag in a trouser suit. On 15 April 1970, she had already appeared in the plenary in a trouser suit.[2] Prior to this, the vice-president of the Bundestag Richard Jaeger (CSU) had stated that he would not allow any woman to enter the plenary in trousers, let alone step up to the lectern. Provoked by this statement, she bought a light-coloured trouser suit and entered the Bundestag. She then received a large number of anonymous letters, some of which insulted her severely.

After withdrawing from politics, she became a writer and wrote several books and plays. At the Writers' Congress in Berlin (14/15 May 1986), she was elected to the Federal Executive Committee of the Verband deutscher Schriftsteller (VS), now part of ver.di, and held this office until September 1987.

Writings

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Audiobook

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Literature

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References

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  1. ^ Philipp Rock: Macht, Märkte und Moral: Zur Rolle der Menschenrechte in der Außenpolitik der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in den sechziger und siebziger Jahren. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main 2010, ISBN 978-3-631-59705-7, p. 157 f.
  2. ^ Martina Züger (15 April 2010). "40 years ago: First appearance of a woman wearing trousers in the Bundestag". WDR2 programme "Stichtag". Retrieved 15 January 2020.
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