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Anna Vandenhoeck

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Anna Vandenhoeck (1709–1787) was a German printer.[1] She managed the printing shop Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht in Göttingen after the death of her spouse Abraham Vandenhoeck in 1751 to 1787, a printing shop famous for publishing a great number of the well known literature of the Age of Enlightenment.

Anna Perry was born in 1709 in England. She married Abraham Vandenhoeck, a fellow Reformed Protestant, and ran a printing business with him in Hamburg, Germany. After moving to Göttingen, they established a printing shop in 1735. Following the death of her husband in the summer of 1750, she took over the publishing house. In the early 1780s she established a reading circle that had access to international publications.[2]

Vandenhoeck died on 5 March 1787. The Anna Vandenhoeck Guest Lectureship for Literary Criticism is named for her.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Béatrice Craig: Women and Business since 1500: Invisible Presences in Europe and North America?
  2. ^ a b Lemke, Stefan; Hermneuwöhner, Anke (26 February 2025). "Tracing the life of Anna Vandenhoeck". De Gruyter Conversations.