Born on 26 June 1868 in the Hamburg district of Wandsbeck, Elvira Louiza Helene Fölzer was the younger daughter of the Jewish merchant Ferdinand Heinrich Fölzer, also German consul in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and his wife Ricarda née Bormann-da Maja, whom he married there in 1853. In 1867, the faimily moved to Wandsbek-Marienthal. After schooling in Wandsbeck, she matriculated from the state gymnasium in Dresden-Neustadt in 1899, already 31 years old. She then studied archaeology, classical philology and history of culture at the universities of Leipzig, Freiburg, and Bonn.
Career
Fölzer twice applied for a grant from the German Archaeological Institute so that she could continue her work on Greek vases but was turned down because of her age. When she completed her studies, she was already 38. In the summer of 1906, she was offered employment as a researcher at the Provincial Museum in Trier. She wrote a number of short papers on Roman sites in the city and its surroundings, for example the excavations at Roden , a statue of Mars in Trier, the Trier amphitheatre, and a statue of Athena in Neumagen. In particular, from 1908 she worked on the origins and development of local terra sigillata pottery. On its publication in 1913, considerable attention was given to her work Die Bilderschüsseln der ostgallischen Sigillata-Manufakturen: Römische Keramik in Trier. Despite the success of her book, although she twice applied for a permanent management post at the Trier museum, in each case a man was selected. As there was no further provision for her salary, she had to leave the Trier museum on 30 March 1917. Until then, she had spent much of her time in Frankfurt, preparing the second volume of her silligata work. It was however never published. There is no further information about her career although she may well have become a schoolteacher. In 1927, she was registered as a private tutor in Berlin and probably died in 1938 or 1939, possibly some ten years earlier. As a Jew, her name was removed from the list of members of the German Archaeological Institute in 1938.