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Spielrein family, 1896
Sabina, Emilia and Jan in front, Eva with Isaac middle row left, Nikolai and probably Mosya at back, others unknown.
Spielrein family
From the left: Sabina, Eva, and Emilia.
Wedding anniversary of Eva and Nikolai Spielrein, Rostov-on-Don, 1909
From the left: Eva, Sabina, Nikolai, Emil, Isaak, and Jan.
Spielrein in Geneva in 1921
Spielrein with other members of the Institut Rousseau: Godin (centre), Claparède, Piaget, 1921. Photograph appears by kind permission of
Archives Institut Jean-Jacques Rousseau (AIJJR).
Archives Institut Jean-Jacques Rousseau (AIJJR).
Identity document
Sabina Spielrein in the 1930s.
Eva Spielrein (nee Lublinskaya)
Eva Spielrein, on her death bed, 1922
Rabbi Lublynski
Nikolai Spielrein
Isaak, Jan and Emil Spielrein
Isaak Spielrein
Eva Spielrein
Eva Spielrein (Sabina's daughter, 1926-1942)
Memorial plaque
Spielrein's house at Thomasiusstrasse 2 in Berlin. She stayed there in 1912-1914.
Spielrein's house at Thomasiusstrasse 2, Berlin
Sabina Spielrein lived in Berlin in 1912-1914.
The Ryabushinsky Mansion
The Ryabushinsky Mansion (now the Maxim Gorky Literary and Memorial Museum) at 6/2 Malaya Nikitskaya Street housing the Orphanage-Laboratory, Psychoanalytic Institute and a publishing house.
Adolf Szpilrajn's tombstone
The tombstone of Adolf Szpilrajn, Sabina Spielrein's uncle, Jewish Cemetery in Warsaw, sector 19, row 5, number 4.
Spielrein's letter to Max Eitingon, 24 August 1927
Published by Sabine Richebächer as ‘"I Long to Get Together with All of You…’: A Letter of Sabina Spielrein-Scheftel (Rostov-on-Don) to Max Eitingon, 24 August 1927", in: Psychoanalysis and History, vol. 18, pp. 119-133.
Press note about Dr. Adolf Szpilrajn's medical practice in Warsaw
Dr. Adolf Szpilrajn at 3 Boduena St. has resumed accepting patients.
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