Friderike Maria Zweig


Friderike Maria Zweig was an Austrian writer. She was the first wife of Stefan Zweig, also an Austrian writer.

Early life and education

Friderike Burger was born into a Viennese Jewish family, the daughter of Emanuel and Theresia Burger. She was one of the first women to have been permitted to attend the University of Vienna, where she studied literature and French.
Her first marriage was to Felix Edler von Winternitz, a civil servant. Together they had two daughters, Alexia Elizabeth born in 1907 and Susana Benedictine in 1909.

Marriage to Zweig

She first met Stefan Zweig in 1908, and four years later they started an affair when she was 30 and still married to her first husband. They did not marry for a long time, partially due to divorce being impossible in the Catholic Austro-Hungarian Empire, and only married in 1920 once the Austrian republic was established. After the wedding they moved into a small house in Salzburg found by Friderike on an earlier visit.
During the years of their life in Salzburg, Friderike took on the role of a hostess for many of Zweig's literary friends. Equally, she played a big part in supporting Zweig's artistic endeavours by being the housekeeper and providing help on translations and editing, as well as acting as a support during his bouts of depression and anxiety.
Friderike and Zweig divorced in 1938.

Work

At first, Friderike tried working as a literary journalist, but this did not earn enough money and instead, she started teaching French and history. During her marriage to Zweig she often helped him with research and translation as well as reading books he was sent, making excerpts from them and writing letters of acknowledgement in his name. Friderike was also a founder of the Stefan Zweig Society.
In 1946 Friderike wrote a memoire, Married to Stefan Zweig, recounting the years she spent being married to Zweig.
As a founder of the American-European Friendship Association, Friderike was also known for her work promoting Austrian-American cultural ties, for which she was decorated by the Austrian government.