Eva Reich

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eva_Reich an entity of type: Thing

Eva Renate Reich (* 27. April 1924 in Wien; † 11. August 2008 in Hancock, Maine, USA) war eine austro-amerikanische Ärztin, die besonders auf dem Gebiet der „sanften Geburt“ und der Behandlung von sogenannten Schreibabys Theorien ihres Vaters Wilhelm Reich in die Praxis umsetzte. rdf:langString
Eva Renate Reich (27 April 1924 – 10 August 2008) developed a type of infant massage. Reich was the eldest child of Annie Pink and Wilhelm Reich, who was a well-known psychoanalyst who studied with Sigmund Freud. Reich was born in Vienna and moved to America in 1938 at the age of 14 and then studied at Barnard College and then a medical degree from Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and went on to marry William Moise, who she divorced in 1974. Reich continued some of her father's work and found recognition for her energy massage during the New Age movements of the 1960s. Reich retired in 1992 and suffered a series of strokes before her death in 2008 at the age of 84. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Eva Reich
rdf:langString Eva Reich
xsd:integer 69608852
xsd:integer 1083037154
rdf:langString Eva Renate Reich (* 27. April 1924 in Wien; † 11. August 2008 in Hancock, Maine, USA) war eine austro-amerikanische Ärztin, die besonders auf dem Gebiet der „sanften Geburt“ und der Behandlung von sogenannten Schreibabys Theorien ihres Vaters Wilhelm Reich in die Praxis umsetzte.
rdf:langString Eva Renate Reich (27 April 1924 – 10 August 2008) developed a type of infant massage. Reich was the eldest child of Annie Pink and Wilhelm Reich, who was a well-known psychoanalyst who studied with Sigmund Freud. Reich was born in Vienna and moved to America in 1938 at the age of 14 and then studied at Barnard College and then a medical degree from Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and went on to marry William Moise, who she divorced in 1974. Reich continued some of her father's work and found recognition for her energy massage during the New Age movements of the 1960s. Reich retired in 1992 and suffered a series of strokes before her death in 2008 at the age of 84.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1889

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