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  1. Elsa Einstein. Elsa Einstein (18 January 1876 – 20 December 1936) [1] was the second wife and cousin of Albert Einstein. Their mothers were sisters, thus making them maternal first cousins. The couple were also paternal second cousins (i.e. their fathers were first cousins). Born an Einstein, Elsa gave up the name when she took the surname of ...

    • THE MYTH: HE WAS A BAD STUDENT. Though the German-born prodigy’s parents were concerned when he didn’t start speaking until the age of 2, he would go on to use his words (and his numbers) very wisely in the classroom.
    • THE MYTH: HE HAD ASPERGER'S SYNDROME. The intellectual treasured his solitude and was often characterized as rude and insensitive, and there are many stories of him acting out in school as a child, which is likely what caused some to retrospectively diagnose him with the disorder.
    • THE MYTH: HE CHOSE TO BE A VEGETARIAN. Einstein was plagued with many digestive problems before the age of 50, including stomach ulcers, jaundice, inflammation of the gall bladder, and intestinal pains.
    • THE MYTH: HE WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ATOM BOMB. Though his theories from 1905 impacted the development of the nuclear weapon, which would later be used in World War II, Einstein wasn't directly responsible for the atom bomb.
  2. Apr 2, 2014 · Elsa Löwenthal was born on January 18, 1876, in Ulm, Germany. She married Max Löwenthal in 1896 and together they had three children, daughters Ilse and Margot, and a son, who died as an infant ...

  3. Dec 19, 2016 · They maintained a secret correspondence over two years. Elsa kept 21 of his letters, now in the Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. During this period, Albert held various faculty positions first ...

  4. Mar 14, 2019 · But it was his first wife, Mileva Einstein-Maric (approximately pronounced Mar-itch ), who accompanied and supported him intellectually and emotionally throughout the difficult early years of his ...

  5. Nov 6, 1996 · Mileva, Einstein wrote to Elsa in 1913, is ''an unfriendly, humorless creature.'' In another letter, he wrote: ''I treat my wife as an employee whom I cannot fire. I have my own bedroom and...

  6. Oct 17, 2013 · Fact #7: Einstein was popular with the ladies. In letters that he wrote to Elsa, Einstein readily acknowledged many extramarital affairs. He wrote that his girlfriends showered him with "unwanted" affection, The Telegraph reported.

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