August Wilhelm Hofmann-"Reigning Chemist-in-Chief"
One hundred and twenty‐five years ago, on November 11th, 1867, the German Chemical Society of Berlin held its inaugural meeting. The main purpose of the Society was to unite pure and applied chemistry and to foster cooperation between academic research and the chemical industry. And, indeed, it soon...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Angewandte Chemie (International ed.) 1992-10, Vol.31 (10), p.1265-1282 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | One hundred and twenty‐five years ago, on November 11th, 1867, the German Chemical Society of Berlin held its inaugural meeting. The main purpose of the Society was to unite pure and applied chemistry and to foster cooperation between academic research and the chemical industry. And, indeed, it soon became the major forum of German and even European chemistry. Its program clearly bears the hallmark of a single individual: August Wilhelm Hofmann, the Society's first president, who died 100 years ago. For his contemporaries, Hofmann represented a new type of chemistry professor. At no time since have professional chemists felt as abundantly endowed with potential for the future and with public esteem. Hofmann's portrait was monumental even then, and still today it would belong in any gallery devoted to our distinguished forebears.
Anniversaries provide an opportunity to direct our attention toward the past—and thus to ourselves as well. We are, after all, heirs to that period from which the modern world derives its profile. Questions from our own time lead us to reacquaint ourselves with one of the founders of modern chemistry, but we may also benefit from a fresh look at an epoch which, beneath the surface of prosperity and progress, was as contradictory as our own, an epoch struggling to understand the role of science in the new industrial era.
The German Chemical Society of Berlin held its inaugural meeting 125 years ago, on November 11, 1867. The main purpose of the Society was to unite pure and applied chemistry and foster cooperation between academic research and the chemical industry. And, indeed, it soon became the major forum for German and even European chemistry. Its program clearly bears the hallmark of a single individual: August Wilhelm Hofmann, the Society's first president, who died 100 years ago. The life and times of this legendary chemist, who can rightfully be considered the father of synthetic chemistry, are captured here. |
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ISSN: | 0570-0833 1521-3773 |
DOI: | 10.1002/anie.199212653 |