Career
She was one of the first female drivers in the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, living sometimes in Klagenfurt (now in Austria) and sometimes in Gorizia (now in Italy). She was also a racing driver, winning the 1907 Wanderpreis of the Carinthian Automobile Club in an Itala car. She became the first victim on World War I on the Isonzo Front when she was shot (possibly by mistake) on August 10, 1914 at a checkpoint in Srpenica (near Bovec) while on a mission for the Red Cross.
Her story was largely forgotten, and was reconstructed in 2014 from primary sources by Nello Cristianini in the book The Last Summer.
Since then, her story has been covered by television and newspapers, and in 2015 she was second in a contest organised by the Kleine Zeitung of Klagenfurt to choose the name of a new street in the town of Saint Veit. She is buried in Saint Michael am Zollfeld, Austria.
A monument stands on the place of her death, in Srpenica, and a documentary by television Capodistria tells her story.