Christiane Herzog

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Christiane Herzog
Herzog at the 1996 Berlin Marathon
Spouse of the President of Germany
In role
1 July 1994 – 30 June 1999
PresidentRoman Herzog
Preceded byMarianne von Weizsäcker
Succeeded byChristina Rau
Personal details
Born
Christiane Krauss

(1936-10-26)26 October 1936
Munich, Bavaria, Nazi Germany
Died19 June 2000(2000-06-19) (aged 63)
Munich, Germany
SpouseRoman Herzog
Children2

Christiane Herzog (née Krauss; (26 October 1936 – 19 June 2000) was the wife of Roman Herzog, the former President of Germany.

Biography[edit]

She was the daughter of a Protestant parish priest, Paul Krauss and his wife Friedl. As a child Christiane was probably destined for leadership joining the Pathfinder movement.[1] She was educated at the same school as her future husband, Landshut Grammar, in The Allgau, Bavaria, and studied at the University of Munich graduating in Pedagogy, in 1955. She married in 1958, still aged only twenty-one, Roman Herzog, a childhood sweetheart. Christiane and her husband were members of the Evangelical Church in Germany. They had two sons (born 1959 and 1964). Before he was elected President, Roman had a long and distinguished career as a legal scholar and professor at various universities, and since as a Member of Parliament, as a cabinet minister in the state of Baden-Württemberg, as a judge and finally President of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany from 1987 to 1994. The family lived in a number of cities, moving in 1969 to Ziegelhausen, near Heidelberg. From 1973 the family has been living at the West German capital Bonn. Before moving to Stuttgart in 1978 and then finally to Karlsruhe.

From 1985 to 1993, she was the Christliches Jugenddorfwerk Deutschlands Vice President. During her husband's tenure as President, she was the patron of the German UNICEF committee and the Müttergenesungswerk, and took on several charitable responsibilities. On her husband's election as President of Germany she is said to have remarked "I do not consider myself a carnation in the button-hole."[2]

During 1990s Christiane appeared in several films. Beckmann (1999) in which she was uncredited for one episode, was a successful series that reached international audiences. On the television show Zu Gast bei Christiane Herzog (1996), where she invited a guest (usually some prominent person) to the Bellevue Palace and discussed contemporary issues in the kitchen of the presidential residence while they were cooking. This theme gained critical acclaim when published into English as An Invitation to Dine.[3] and Kochern mit Kindern.[4]

She was a guest on the Wetten, dass...? (1996) game show for children. And the previous year she had been invited on the talk show Alfredissimo -kochen mit bio. Her beef roulade, goose breast, and spaetzle became favourites with the German public. Known also for her affable, well-meaning charm, she was mimiced by comedians, for her no-nonsense bossy approach. Popular with racing driver, Michael Schumacher, professional chef, Otto Koch, and the entertainer Thomas Gottschalk; she left her critics spellbound by serenity and politeness. She was a relentless perfectionist; characteristic of her nationhood perhaps, she was made "kitchen Woman of the Year, 1998". After 42 years of marriage she cut a traditional figure of frau at work in the kitchen with a strong message and positive attitude. She brushed off accusations that she was anti-feminist, saying "even single people have to eat."[5] Although never credited as an actress, she was a well-known national celebrity in her own right, exploring the part she played in the politics of post-war Germany.

The Christiane Herzog Foundation for the Cystic Fibrosis Sick that became a leading research institute, was named in her honour. Although often attributed to her husband's influence, her own popularity in Germany was considerable.[6] By the time Ramon Herzog took over as president she had driven thousands of kilometres around Germany in her second hand car canvassing the support of at least half a million Germans every year. Christiane's cookbooks became a way to reveal to the Deutsches Volk her husband's diet, giving her cookery a nationwide appeal. As First Lady she visited orphanages in South America, which proved debilitating and exhausting. For the last three years of her life she suffered from an incurable cancer.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Mohn, Liz (2005). The Heart of Business: Integrating Prosperity and Values for Real Change. Crown Publishing. ISBN 9780307337023.
  2. ^ Rosenbaum, Ulrich (20 June 2000). "Germany is mourning for Christiane Herzog - she has had cancer since 1997". Mopo: Hamburger Morgenpost. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  3. ^ Herzog, Christiane (2000). An Invitation to Dine. ASIN B01K96A9GO. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  4. ^ Kochern mit kindern (Cooking for Children).
  5. ^ von Bernd, Matthes (2000). "Christiane Herzog is dead: sovereign other president's wife". Der Tagesspiegel.
  6. ^ Christiane Herzog Centre

External links[edit]

Unofficial roles
Preceded by Spouse of the President of Germany
1994–1999
Succeeded by