Background
Bloede was born Marie Antoinette Franziska Jungnitz in Wrocław (then Breslau), Silesia, to Johanna Maria Friederike Jungnitz (née Schmieder) and Karl Ferdinand Jungnitz (a Justice of the Supreme Court of Silesia).
Bloede was born Marie Antoinette Franziska Jungnitz in Wrocław (then Breslau), Silesia, to Johanna Maria Friederike Jungnitz (née Schmieder) and Karl Ferdinand Jungnitz (a Justice of the Supreme Court of Silesia).
He died in 1843. Bloede shared his poetical gifts and his liberal sympathies. Her husband, Gustavas "Gustav" Blöede (23 September 1814-1811 May 1888), born in Dresden to Auguste Sophia Juliane (née von Langen) and Karl August Blöede, was a physician. He was foremost in the liberal ranks, had to flee Dresden to avoid arrest, made his way to Brussels and then disappeared.
She published Princess Sheba, Vittoria, Godiva, Three narrative poems in 1868 and Enoch Arden v.
Tennyson in 1869. The Bloedes" home was frequented by noted writers, among them Bayard Taylor, Edmund Clarence Stedman, Thomas Aldrich and Richard Henry Stoddard. Marie Bloede"s poems and articles, both in English and German, attracted attention.
Bloede died in Brooklyn, New New York Gustav died in Catonsville, Maryland.
Their son was the chemist and businessman Victor Gustav Bloede (1849–1937).
Her half-brother, Friedrich von Sallet, was a poet, an intense liberal in his political views.
Gustav became and member of the city council of Dresden during the revolution of 1848.