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How the life and death of Annie Leifs shows how women have disappeared from history

The wife of Iceland’s greatest composer sacrificed everything to support his work, while he strived to ensure that he alone would be remembered. By Sif Sigmarsdóttir

Wednesday 24 April 2019 10:09 BST
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Jón and Annie Leifs in Leipzig in 1921
Jón and Annie Leifs in Leipzig in 1921 (Árni Heimir Ingólfsson)

Reykjavik. It’s the middle of the 20th century. A woman with dark eyes stands outside a small stone house in the old town. The woman inside is afraid she will cast a spell of misfortune over her family. In the house lives Iceland’s most famous composer with his third wife and young son. Outside stands the woman who sacrificed everything so Iceland’s greatest musician could come to be. The woman who has disappeared from history.

In March 1918, a young German woman named Annie Riethof plucked up the courage to speak to the boy she had a crush on for the first time, and became forever tangled up in Iceland’s history.

The man in question was 18-year-old Jon Thorleifsson, or Jón Leifs as he chose to call himself. Annie and Jón met while studying music at the Leipzig Conservatory of Music. But the paths that led them there couldn’t have been less alike.

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