Karl König: My Task: Autobiography and Biographies (Paperback)
Other Books in Series
This is book number 1 in the Karl Konig Archives series.
- #4: The Child with Special Needs: Letters and Essays on Curative Education (Paperback): $25.00
- #6: An Inner Journey Through the Year: Soul Images and the Calendar of the Soul (Paperback): $25.00
- #7: The Calendar of the Soul: A Commentary (Paperback): $30.00
- #8: Becoming Human: A Social Task: The Threefold Social Order (Paperback): $30.00
- #10: At the Threshold of the Modern Age: Biographies Around the Year 1861 (Paperback): $40.00
- #11: Brothers and Sisters: The Order of Birth in the Family: An Expanded Edition (Karl Konig Archive #11) (Paperback): $25.00
- #12: Kaspar Hauser and Karl König (Paperback): $29.95
- #13: Animals: An Imaginative Zoology (Paperback): $29.95
- #16: The Grail and the Development of Conscience: St Paul and Parsifal (Paperback): $29.95
- #17: Plays for the Festivals of the Year (Paperback): $40.00
- #18: The Spirit of Camphill: Birth of a Movement (Paperback): $25.00
- #20: Before Birth and Beyond Death: The Transformation of the Human Being (Karl Konig Archive #20) (Paperback): $24.95
- #21: The Seasons and Their Festivals: Human, Earthly and Cosmic Rhythms (Karl Konig Archive #21) (Paperback): $27.95
- #22: The First Three Years of the Child: How Children Learn to Walk, Speak and Think (Karl Konig Archive #22) (Paperback): $27.95
Description
Karl K nig: My Task is an inspiring introduction to K nig's remarkable life and work. This book combines K nig's autobiographical fragment and an essay by Peter Selg with two selected reminiscences written by K nig's colleagues Anke Weihs and Hans-Heinrich Engel.
Born in 1902 into a Jewish family, Karl K nig grew up in Vienna in the last years of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He studied medicine and during this time came across the work of Rudolf Steiner. Soon after graduating he worked with Ita Wegman in Switzerland, where he also met his wife, Tilla.
He was a pioneer in the early days of Pilgramshain, a home for children with special needs in Silesia, Germany. However, in 1936 under political pressure he left Germany for Austria. Here he had a large medical practice as well as being the focus of a group of young people interested in Steiner's work.
Following the annexation of Austria by the Nazis, K nig and many of the young people around him came to Britain as refugees. The ideal of working together as a community was put into practice with the founding of Camphill in 1939. K nig was the driving force behind the expansion of the Camphill movement across the British Isles, into Europe, South Africa and North America. He died in 1966.