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      • Zackheim does manage to eliminate a number of women as possible Lieserls, including a melodramatic Berlin actress who claimed in the 1930s to be Einstein's daughter. Zackheim's final conclusions, however--based on little more than inferences from a cryptic 1903 letter from Einstein to Mileva ("I am very sorry about what has happened to Lieserl.
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  2. Apr 5, 2022 · The scant clues left scholars with two theories: either Lieserl died as a child or the Einsteins gave her up for adoption. What Happened To Lieserl Einstein? In 1999, author Michele Zackheim published Einstein’s Daughter: The Search for Lieserl. After years spent searching for clues and interviewing Serbians about family trees, Zackheim ...

  3. Zackheim does manage to eliminate a number of women as possible Lieserls, including a melodramatic Berlin actress who claimed in the 1930s to be Einstein's daughter. Zackheim's final...

  4. Apr 20, 2000 · Zackheim’s theory is that Einstein foisted Lieserl off onto his fiance’s relatives in Serbia and barely acknowledged her existence again. Even after he married Maric, he never reclaimed...

  5. www.snopes.com › fact-check › einstein-universal-forceA Universal Force | Snopes.com

    Apr 28, 2015 · In her 1999 book Einstein's Daughter: The Search for Lieserl, author Michele Zackheim combed through the available evidence and reached the conclusion that Lieserl was born with a severe mental ...

  6. Jul 1, 2000 · Leaving aside the fact that light is deflected toward the Sun, the calculation cited by Zackheim was not done by Newton but by Einstein! He published it in 1911 in a paper that preceded general relativity, which came out in 1916.

  7. Oct 25, 1999 · What became of Lieserl? Scholars have assumed that she was put up for adoption, but Zackheim, who went to Serbia and Germany to comb archives and to interview the Einsteins' surviving relatives, neighbors and associates, believes that Lieserl was born with a severe mental handicap and died of scarlet fever in infancy.

    • Michele Zackheim
  8. In the Time article, Sachs commented on Zackheim's dogged efforts to uncover the fate of Lieserl in the war-torn Balkans. "The result is a colorful glimpse of rural Serbia culture, with its patrimonial society, strong family loyalties, female subservience, [and] slow, leisurely discourse."

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