Isabella 'Marie' Imandt

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Scottish journalist and foreign correspondent Isabella 'Marie' Imandt, from Dundee Central Library Local History Centre.

Isabella ‘Marie’ Imandt (1860 – 1945) was a female journalist from Dundee, Scotland, and one of the first female correspondents.

Isabella ‘Marie’ Franziska Imandt was born in Dundee, Scotland in 1860. She was the daughter of local woman Anne McKenzie and Prussian immigrant Peter Imandt. Her father earned the nickname 'Red Wolf' when he was younger and was close friends with Karl Marx, as well as being a founding father of the German Social Democratic Party.[1] The political activist moved to Dundee around 1856 and after marrying McKenzie, fathered three children and worked as a German teacher at the High School of Dundee, which Marie attended as a student. Highly intelligent and ambitious, Imandt was the first woman to graduate with Honours as a “Lady Literate in Arts” from the University of St Andrews - years before women could graduate in the same way as men - in 1880.[2] She was fluent in both German and French.

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