About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 19. Chapters: Almut Brommel, Alois Hannecker, Alwin Wagner, Andreas Seelig, Anja Mollenbeck, Anna Ruh, Armin Lemme, Astrid Kumbernuss, Charlotte Mader, Christine Spielberg, Diana Gansky, Emil Hirschfeld, Emil Welz, Evelin Jahl, Franka Dietzsch, Gabriele Reinsch, Gisela Beyer, Gisela Mauermayer, Grete Heublein, Ilke Wyludda, Ingrid Lotz, Irina Meszynski, Jana Lauren, Jana Tucholke, Josef Waitzer, Julia Fischer (athlete), Jurgen Schult, Karin Illgen, Kathleen Hering, Lars Riedel, Liesel Westermann, Lilli Henoch, Ludwig Uettwiller, Marco Jakobs, Margitta Pufe, Markus Munch (athlete), Martina Hellmann, Martin Wierig, Michael Mollenbeck, Milly Reuter, Nadine Muller (athlete), Paula Mollenhauer, Paul Willfuhr, Robert Harting, Sabine Engel, Sabine Rumpf, Simone Mathes, Torsten Schmidt, Wilhelm Dorr, Wolfgang Schmidt, Wolfgang Warnemunde, Wulf Brunner. Excerpt: Lilli Henoch (October 26, 1899 - September 1942) was a German track and field athlete who set four world records and won 10 German national championships, in four different disciplines. Henoch set world records in the discus (twice), the shot put, and the 4 100 meters relay events. She also won German national championships in the shot put four times, the 4 100 meters relay three times, the discus twice, and the long jump. She was Jewish, and during the Holocaust she and her mother were deported and machine-gunned to death by the Nazis. Henoch was Jewish, and was born in Konigsberg, East Prussia (Germany). Her father, a businessman, died in 1912. She and her family moved to Berlin, and her mother subsequently remarried. Henoch set world records in the discus, shot put, and-with her teammates-4 100 meters relay events. Between 1922 and 1926, she won 10 German national championships: in shot put, 1922-25; discus, 1923 and 1924; long jump, 1924; and 4 ...