Nina Christesen

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Nina Mikhailovna Christesen AM (23 December 1911 – 8 August 2001) (née Maximoff) pioneered the study of Russian in Australia and founded the Department of Russian Language and Literature at the University of Melbourne in 1946.

Christesen was born on 23 December 1911 in Blagoveshchensk, Russia[1] to Mikhail (Michael) Ivanovitch (6 Sep 1885–1967)[2][3] and Tatiana Siemenovna (c.1889–1979)[4] Maximoff.[5] In 1917 she and her mother left Saint Petersburg to join her father, a captain in the merchant navy, in Harbin,[6] Manchuria where she began her secondary education. In 1925 the family migrated to Brisbane, Australia.[7] Christesen gained admittance in 1926 to the Commercial High School in Brisbane where she passed the Junior Public Examination in 1930.[8][9] In February 1931 Christesen passed the Supplementary and Adult Matriculation Examination, giving her admission to the University of Queensland from which she later graduated, receiving a Dip.Ed in 1938.[10] She received her British Naturalization Certificate on 19 December 1933.[11] While teaching at the Institute of Modern Languages at Queensland University she met Clem Christesen who was taking lessons in German.[12] They were married at St John's Cathedral in Brisbane on 23 January 1942.[13] In 1945 the couple moved to Melbourne.[14] They moved into "Stanhope" in Eltham (designed by architect Harold Desbrowe-Annear),[15] and lived there for the rest of their lives.[16]

In 1947 her portrait was painted by the artist Lina Bryans.[17]

Christesen died on 8 August 2001, predeceasing her husband by two years. Judith Armstrong wrote The Christesen Romance about their life together.[15]

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