M. A. S. G. Ingeborg Holgersson's "Travels in the Near East": A Reinterpretation of Some Aspects of the Text. Ingeborg Holgersson's "Travels in the Near East": A Reinterpretation of Some Aspects of the Text. Ingeborg Holgersson. - Available on Academia.edu. 1. The Dark Lady of the House: A Reinterpretation of Erik Holgersson's “Travels in the Near East.” Ingeborg Holgersson. - Academia.edu. 2. Ingeborg Holgersson's "Travels in the Near East": A Reinterpretation of Some Aspects of the Text. - Academia.edu. 3. Ingeborg Holgersson's "Travels in the Near East": A Reinterpretation of Some Aspects of the Text. - Academia.edu. 4. Ingeborg Holgersson. [Archive]. Universitat Karlstad. Campus Sankt Mikael. Karlstad. 27 Jul 2016. 01 Sep 2017. Unpublished. Ingeborg Holgersson (1863–1945), also known as Ingeborg Holgersson-Wallenius, was a Swedish feminist and suffragist. She was an active member of the Swedish Social Democratic Party from her youth, and was active as a journal editor during her youth. At the age of 34 she became the youngest member of the Parliament of Sweden when she was elected, as a member of the Social Democratic Party, to the municipal council of Karlstad. In 1920, she was elected to the national parliament, and she remained a member until she married in 1926. She played a significant role in the feminist movement and was a popular speaker at public meetings. After her marriage, she continued her political career, and she was considered a strong supporter of the "marriage reform" and the "women's movement", and became the first women to be awarded the King's Medal, First Class, in 1944. Ingeborg Holgersson, who was the daughter of Johan Holgersson, a well-known poet, was the granddaughter of Erik Holgersson, a social reformer. As a child, Ingeborg Holgersson accompanied her father to the Ottoman Empire, where he was a member of the commission that
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