Olga Haring
Olga Haring | |
|---|---|
| Born | 18 May 1866 Črnomelj, now Slovenia |
| Died | 1943 (aged 76–77) Črnomelj, now Slovenia |
| Occupations | landowner, landlady, poet |
Olga Haring (18 May 1866 – 1943) was a Slovenian landowner and poet.
Childhood
She was born into a wealthy Slovenian family on 18 May 1866 in Črnomelj.[1][2] Her mother, Zofija Kapelle (1843–1929), was a large landowner and landlady, a collector of national embroidery, painted Easter eggs, and other folk artefacts, and a patriot.[2][3][1] Her father was Teodor Haring, whom her mother had been forced to marry at the age of nineteen by her father; he later abandoned her mother and disappeared to America before Olga's birth.[4][2][1] She had an older brother who died at the age of six in 1869.[5][6] Olga wished to become a teacher, and after completing elementary education she attended a teachers' training college run by the Ursuline nuns in Ljubljana.[2] She and her mother appear together in one of the oldest private photographs in Slovenia, taken around 1880 by Josip Nikolaj Sadnikar.[7][2]
Illness
While still young she fell ill and was therefore forced to leave the teachers' college.[2] Later, as a result of illness, she became blind.[2][8][9] She remained with her mother, and the two supported themselves through renting out property.[2] Her mother's house, the Viniški Manor at Suhi most in Črnomelj, was a gathering place for nationally conscious Slovenes. Among their visitors were the teacher and ethnologist Leopoldina Bavdek – Poldka, who also collaborated with her mother; the veterinarian and collector of antiquities and artworks Josip Nikolaj Sadnikar; the painter Ferdo Vesel, husband of painter Jessie Case Vesel; the painter Maksim Gaspari; and the publicist and ethnographer Božo Račič.[2][8][3][10] In 1913 they were also visited by the Russian soprano singer and ethnologist Yevgeniya Paprits Linyevna (1854–1919).[11][2]
Literary work
She was engaged in writing poetry. Because of her blindness, she dictated her poems.[9] One notebook of her poems has been preserved.[9][8] A selection of her poems was published in the book In Črnomelj They Have Always Been Merry … (V Črnomlju od nekdaj bili so veseli ...) by the ethnologist Marjetka Balkovec Debevec, published in 2008.[8][12]
Later life and death
After her mother's death in 1928, she inherited her estate.[3][13] She never married and had no children.[14] She died in early 1943 in Črnomelj.[14][15]
References
- ^ a b c "Krstna knjiga / Taufbuch - 03803 | Črnomelj | Nadškofijski arhiv Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online" [Baptismal book / Taufbuch - 03803 | Črnomelj | Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online]. data.matricula-online.eu (in Slovenian). Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana. Retrieved 14 December 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Boris, Grabrijan (22 November 2025). "Ljudje ob Kolpi: Zofija Haring, zbirateljica ljudskega blaga". svet24.si.
- ^ a b c "Gospa Haringova" [Madam Haring]. Jutro (in Slovenian). Vol. 274. Konzorcij jutra. 21 November 1928.
- ^ "Poročna knjiga / Trauungsbuch - 01438 | Metlika | Nadškofijski arhiv Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online" [Marriage book / Trauungsbuch - 01438 | Metlika | Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online]. data.matricula-online.eu (in Slovenian). Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana. Retrieved 14 December 2025.
- ^ "Krstna knjiga / Taufbuch - 03803 | Črnomelj | Nadškofijski arhiv Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online". data.matricula-online.eu (in Slovenian). Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana. Retrieved 14 December 2025.
- ^ "Mrliška knjiga / Sterbebuch - 03807 | Črnomelj | Nadškofijski arhiv Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online" [Deaths book / Sterbebuch - 03807 | Črnomelj | Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana | Slovenia | Matricula Online]. data.matricula-online.eu (in Slovenian). Archdiocesan Archives of Ljubljana. Retrieved 14 December 2025.
- ^ Riznič, Aleksander (22 August 2021). "Sunday selection of old photographs (33) (Nedeljski izbor starih fotografij (33))". radio-odeon.com (in Slovenian). Retrieved 18 November 2025.
- ^ a b c d Balkovec Debevec, Marjetka (2008). V Črnomlju od nekdaj bili so veseli ... [In Črnomelj They Have Always Been Merry …] (in Slovenian). Črnomelj: Občina Črnomelj (Municipality of Črnomelj). ISBN 978-961-90233-4-1.
- ^ a b c Riznič, Aleksander (23 July 2022). "Črnomelj fčasih (162)" [Črnomelj in Former Times (162)]. radio-odeon.com (in Slovenian).
- ^ "Črnomelj" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 18 November 2025.
- ^ Grabrijan, Boris. "People along the Kolpa River: Leopoldina Bavdek (Ljudje ob Kolpi: Leopoldina Bavdek)". radio-odeon.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 23 March 2024. Retrieved 6 November 2025.
- ^ "BALKOVEC DEBEVEC, Marjetka" [BALKOVEC DEBEVEC, Marjetka]. Faces of Slovenian Regions (in Sinhala). Retrieved 13 December 2025.
- ^ "Domače vesti" [Local News]. Jutro (in Slovenian). Vol. 279. Konzorcij jutra. 27 November 1928.
- ^ a b "Kronika" [Chronicle]. Jutro (in Slovenian). Vol. 26. Konzorcij jutra. 2 February 1943.
- ^ "Osebne vesti" [Personal Notices]. Družinski tednik (in Slovenian). Vol. 5. Konzorcij. 4 February 1943.