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Adelma Vay

Austro-Hungarian medium and homoeopathist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adelma Vay
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Baroness Adelma Vay de Vaya, (born Countess Adelaide von Wurmbrand-Stuppach; October 21, 1840 May 24, 1925), was a medium and pioneer of spiritualism in Slovenia and Hungary.

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Baroness Adelma Vay de Vaya

Life and work

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Vay was the elder daughter of Count Ernst von Wurmbrand-Stuppach and his wife, Countess Rosa Teleki de Szék (later wife of Friedrich, Prince of Solms-Baruth).

She was born at Tarnopol, Galicia, today Ternopil, Ukraine, where her father Count Ernst von Wurmbrand-Stuppach was serving as first lieutenant in the local garrison. In her early youth, she lived on the family estate near Schwarzau, Lower Austria. Her father died in 1846; when her mother married again in 1851, she left Austria and moved with her to Prussia for 10 years.[1]

On March 12, 1860, she married baron Ödön (Edmond, Eugen or Otto) Vay de Vaya, a Hungarian magnate.[1] They enjoyed 60 years of marriage, but without having children. The couple lived at first at Tiszalök for some years, and later moved to Slovenske Konjice (Gonobitz), where they bought a mansion at Prevrat, still known as "Baronvaj" ("Baron Vay's").[2]

Ödön was a retired senior officer of the Austro-Hungarian army. On August 9, 1877, the Militar-Veteranen-Verein in Gonobitz (Association of Army Veterans in Gonobitz) was founded, primarily for ex-soldiers regardless of nationality. The association's first president was Hugo Veriand von Windisch-Graetz, and his deputy was Vay de Vaya.[3]

The couple were both members of the local Red Cross Society committee, which in 1897 built a hospital named the Christiane-Lazarett after Christiane Habsburg, president of the Austro-Hungarian Red Cross Society.[4] Baron Vay de Vaya decided in 1908 to have another building constructed (at his own cost) specifically for infectious disease patients. The hospital continued in operation until the beginning of World War II.[3]

Adelma was well known as a great humanitarian, and never charged for her medical advice and assistance.[4]

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Adelma Vay's grave in St. Anna's cemetery, Slovenske Konjice

On March 1, 1921, Ödön died at Mali Lošinj, where the couple had a summer villa.[2] After his death, the widowed Adelma continued to live in the mansion, surrounded by servants. She died on May 24, 1925, at her home. Although she was a Lutheran, Franc Hrastelj, the parson of the local Roman Catholic parish, approved her burial at the corner of the St. Anna's cemetery in Slovenske Konjice.[3]

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Spiritualism

Adelma had the reputation of possessing mystical powers, probably inherited from her mother. She was reputed to have prophetic gifts and to be clairvoyant. She wrote, spoke and drew in an apparent trance-like state. She was a homeopath and attempted to cure people using magnetism.[5]

In 1873, she and her husband founded the Verein spiriter Forscher (Hungarian Spiritualist Association), of which they became the first presidents.[3]

In An Encyclopaedia of Occultism (1920) by Lewis Spence (1874–1955), she was noted as the initiator of spiritualism in Austria-Hungary.[6]

Adelma von Vay once described her book Spirit, Power and Matter[7] as an example of pure Christian Spiritualism. The newly formed association was not thought of as a dogmatic Spiritualistic sect but was anchored in a framework of Christian religion, stated by its association's statutes.[8]

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Publications

Vay was author of many books, written in German and translated into English:

  • Geist-Kraft-Stoff (Spirit, Power, and Matter) (1869), Spirit, Power, and Matter
  • Studien über die Geisterwelt (Studies on the Spirit World), (1874)
  • From My Life (1900)
  • Pictures from the Beyond (1905)
  • Die Sphären zwischen der Erde und Sonne (The Spheres between the Earth and the Sun)

Notes

Sources

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