Henriette "Henni" Emma Gertrud von Halle (née von Mossner) was a German Egyptologist.
Biography
Henni von Halle was born in Berlin on 1 January 1878 to Walther von Mossner, Prussian general of cavalry and former aide-de-camp to Wilhelm II, and Meta Giebert.[1][2] She married Ernst von Halle (née Levy) (born 1808, died 28 June 1909), Professor of Political Economy in Berlin, and they had two sons and a daughter.[1][3][4]
In 1920, with rising inflation, von Halle had to sell her house in Berlin and undertook several jobs on different Egyptology projects. From December 1922 and July 1925 she worked for Abraham Shalom Yahuda.[8] From 1 August 1925 to November 1928, she was employed by Hermann Ranke on Die ägyptischen Personennamen.[1][8] In late 1928, she moved back to Berlin and is recorded sporadically in the payment records of Die ägyptischen Personennamen from 1929 to 1933.[1][8]
After 1933, she is not found in the archive records.[9] She stayed in Berlin until December 1943, then returned to Heidelberg and died in Nußloch on 2 January 1964.[9]
While she did not publish anything on her own, both Erman and Ranke laud her work in their prefaces.[1] Erman also dedicated Aegyptisches handwörterbuch to her and Caroline Ransom Williams, though the two women seem to have never met.[10][1] She was frequently added to lists of German Egyptologists and was referred to as an Egyptologist by Erman; however, von Halle never referred to herself as such.[7]