Ernst Behrle

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Ernst Wilhelm Behrle (born January 18, 1890 in Herbolzheim , Breisgau , † 1969 ) was a German chemist and engineer .

Life

Ernst Behrle's house in Berlin

He was the son of the merchant Camill Behrle and his wife Julie nee Fohr. After attending the secondary school in Ettenheim (Baden), he studied at the Technical University of Charlottenburg and then at the Technical University of Munich . He then moved to the University of Strasbourg and the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg . He obtained his degree in engineering and received his doctorate from the latter university in 1919 as a Dr. phil. The topic of his scientific-mathematical dissertation wasAbout the condensation of o-diamines with β-diketones to form seven-membered rings .

Ernst Behrle took an active part in the First World War, was an officer in the heavy artillery and leader of the Schallmes squad . In 1919 he took up a job at the Baden aniline and soda factory . In the following year he moved to Steiner's Lit.-Reg. of organic chemistry. He gained notoriety above all as the editor of the German Chemical Society , of which he was a member. He chose Berlin-Friedenau as the center of his life , where he lived at Stubenrauchstrasse 9. In 1932 Ernst Behrle was taken over from the Chemisches Zentralblatt department to the Beilstein editorial team for partial employment. In World War II he was placed as a first lieutenant in the reserve uk . After the war he continued to work for the Beilstein Institute based in Frankfurt am Main . He died in 1969. During this time he lived mostly in Freiburg im Breisgau .

family

Ernst Behrle married Imgard Wendlandt, the daughter of Wilhelm Wendlandt, a member of the Prussian state parliament, on May 9, 1924 in Berlin . From this marriage the son Manfred (* 1925) and the daughter Rosemarie (* 1927) emerged. Manfred Behrle worked as a lawyer in Freiburg.

Fonts (selection)

  • About the condensation of o-diamines with β-diketones to form seven-membered rings . Freiburg im Breisgau 1919.

Honors

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Helmut Maier: Chemiker im "Third Reich" , 2015, p. 418.
  2. Ibid., P. 91
  3. Population register of the city of Freiburg im Breisgau, 1951, p. 19.