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      • Emma died in 1955, predeceasing Carl Jung by almost six years. After her death from a recurrence of cancer, he carved a stone in her name, "She was the foundation of my house". He is also said to have wailed, "She was a queen! She was a queen!" ("Sie war eine Königin! Sie war eine Königin!") as he grieved for her.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emma_JungEmma Jung - Wikipedia

    Death. Emma died in 1955, predeceasing Carl Jung by almost six years. After her death from a recurrence of cancer, he carved a stone in her name, "She was the foundation of my house". He is also said to have wailed, "She was a queen! She was a queen!" ( "Sie war eine Königin!

  3. When Emma died Carl Jung carved a stone in her name, “She was the foundation of my house.” He is also said to have cried “She was a queen! She was a queen!” (Sie war eine Königin! Sie war eine Königin!) while mourning for her. The inscription Jung put on Emma’s grave was “Oh vase, sign of devotion and obedience.”

  4. www.wikiwand.com › en › Emma_JungEmma Jung - Wikiwand

    Emma Jung (born Emma Marie Rauschenbach, 30 March 188227 November 1955) was a Swiss Jungian analyst and author. She married Carl Jung, financing and helping him to become the prominent psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology, and together they had five children.

  5. The union of the penniless doctor and the rich heiress produced five children and lasted from 1903 until Emma’s death in 1955.

  6. When his wife Emma died in 1955, Jung wrote in a letter that the loss had taken a lot out of him, and that at his age (80 years old) it wasn’t easy to recover. Yet two years later, he began dictating his autobiography to Aniela Jaffe.

  7. Emma Rauschenbach (1882-1955) was only 14 at the time but she left such a deep impression on Jung that he was convinced that he would marry her one day, and, six years after meeting her for the first time, Carl Gustav, now a young trained medical doctor, proposed to Emma.

  8. Oct 25, 1998 · Emma Jung—analyst, writer, and wife of the famous psychologist C. G. Jung—researched and worked on this book for thirty years, until her death in 1955. Marie-Louise von Franz, also eminent in the field of depth psychology, completed the project.

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