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  • Eberhardt, Isabelle,

Eberhardt, Isabelle, 1877-1904 (Autor Personal)

Forma preferida: Eberhardt, Isabelle, 1877-1904
Usado por/ver desde:
  • Eberhardt, Isabelle Wilhelmine Marie, 1877-1904
  • Ehnni, Isabelle Eberhardt, 1877-1904
  • Mahmoud, Si, 1877-1904
  • Mahmoud Saâdi, 1877-1904
  • Saâdi, Mahmoud, 1877-1904
  • Si Mahmoud, 1877-1904

Hart, U.K. Two ladies of colonial Algeria, 1987: CIP t.p. (Isabelle Eberhardt) pref. (Isabelle Eberhardt Ehnni)

Sud Oranais, c2003: t.p. (Isabelle Eberhardt) p. 263 (b. 17 Feb. 1877, Geneva) p. 265 (d. 21 Oct. 1904, Aïn Sefra)

Männerherz bewahren, 2007: t.p. (Isabelle Eberhardt) p. 10 (called herself Si Mahmoud)

Les figures littéraires du Sud Oranais, 2016: title page (Mahmoud Saâdi (Isabelle Eberhardt)) page 4 of cover (b. Feb. 17, 1887 in Geneva; d. Oct. 21, 1904 in a flash flood in Sefra wadi; converted to Islam)

Wikipedia, May 15, 2017 (Isabelle Wilhelmine Marie Eberhardt (17 February 1877 - 21 October 1904) was a Swiss explorer and writer; as a teenager she published short stories under a male pseudonym; educated by her father; fluent in French, spoke Russian, Geerman and Italian, and was taught Latin, Greek, and classical Arabic; moved to Algeria in May 1897; converted to Islam, eventually adopting the name Si Mahmoud Saadi; married partner, Algerian soldier Slimane Ehnni, while living in Marseille in 1901 after ordered to leave Algeria; they returned to Algeria in 1902; she wrote a column for a newspaper published by Victor Barrucand, Al-Akhbar, and worked for General Hubert Lyautey; after her death at age 27, Barrucand began publishing her remaining manuscripts; she was seen posthumously as an advocate of decolonisation)