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  1. Mathilde Friederike Karoline Ludendorff (born Mathilde Spieß; 4 October 1877 – 24 June 1966) was a German psychiatrist. She was a leading figure in the Völkisch movement known for her unorthodox and conspiratorial ideas. Her third husband was General Erich Ludendorff.

  2. Mathilde Friederike Karoline Ludendorff (* 4. Oktober 1877 in Wiesbaden; † 12. Mai 1966 in Tutzing; geborene Mathilde Spieß, verwitwete von Kemnitz, geschiedene Kleine) war eine deutsche Lehrerin, Ärztin und Schriftstellerin. An der Seite ihres dritten Ehemannes Erich Ludendorff wurde sie eine bekannte Vertreterin der völkischen Bewegung.

  3. In 1926, Ludendorff divorced Margarethe Schmidt and married his second wife Mathilde von Kemnitz (18771966). They published books and essays claiming that the world's problems were the result of Christianity, especially the Jesuits and Catholics , but also conspiracies by Jews and the Freemasons .

  4. Mar 20, 2015 · Mathilde Ludendorff, 72-year-old widow of former Field Marshal Erich Ludendorff, was today sentenced to two years’ “special labor” by a German denazification court here. The court...

  5. Mathilde Ludendorff (nee Spiess, widowed von Kemnitz, divorced Kleine) was one of the first women who studied medicine in Imperial Germany. She wrote a feminist doctoral thesis, refuted Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis early in her career, detected the fraud of Albert von Schrenck-Notzing’s spiritualist research, became a specialist for ...

    • Nervenarzt
    • 512-519
    • German
  6. Mathilde Ludendorff (nee Spiess, widowed von Kemnitz, divorced Kleine) was one of the first women who studied medicine in Imperial Germany.

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  8. In an armchair in front of the judge’s table sits the chief personage in the drama: Dr. med. Mathilde Frieda Karoline Ludendorff, widow of Erich Ludendorff, the defeated Commander-in-Chief of the German armies in the First World War.