Background
Born the daughter of Karl, Baron von Friesen, she was educated in Dresden and Leipzig.
Born the daughter of Karl, Baron von Friesen, she was educated in Dresden and Leipzig.
She was the maternal grandmother of Nicolas Ludwig, Count von Zinzendorf. She was a sister of Otto Heinrich von Friesen, chancellor to Saxon Elector Friedrich August I (August der Starke or Augustus the Strong). Unlike most girls of the time, she was trained in multiple disciplines and even as a youth she was recognized by her contemporaries for her German and Latin verses.
She early became a correspondent with many theologians and scientists of the day.
In that capacity she was able to exercise a not unimportant influence in affairs of both church and state. She encouraged the translation of the Bible into the Lusatian Slavic language of Sorbian but also encouraged the schooling of girls.
In this connection she was engaged also in the founding of the Magdalenenstift School for girls in Altenburg. Following her husband"s death in 1702, she withdrew to her Grosshennersdorf estate in the mountains of eastern Saxony.
Her home was open to many visitors including Lutheran missionaries to Tranquebar and Greenland.
She often offered refuge to religious refugees escaping persecution in neighboring Bohemia and Moravia. The German Pietist poet Johann Jakob Rambach considered her spiritual poetry among the best of their day.