Friedrich Maier-Bode

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Friedrich Maier-Bode (born August 23, 1868 in Tübingen , † February 26, 1952 in Munich ) was a German agriculture teacher and agricultural specialist author.

Life

Friedrich Maier-Bode studied agriculture at the Agricultural Academy Hohenheim and the University of Jena . In Hohenheim he became a member of the Academic Society Gemütlichkeit , later the Corps Germania . After completing his studies, he first worked as an estate official in Westphalia, Schleswig-Holstein and the province of Saxony. In 1894 he founded the Burgdorf Agricultural School . In 1897 he was appointed head of the Augsburg agricultural school and in 1911 of the Bayreuth agricultural school. From 1914 to 1932 he was senior director of the higher regional agricultural school in Nuremberg.

Maier-Bode was the founder of agricultural education in the German army. He was involved in professional and cooperative organizations and wrote numerous specialist publications in the form of articles and textbooks.

The phytopathologist Friedrich Wilhelm Maier-Bode was his son.

Awards

  • Appointment to the State Economics Council
  • Multiple honorary member or honorary chairman in associations and clubs

Fonts

  • Combating arable weeds , 1908
  • The practical farmer , 1908, 2nd edition 1922
  • The farmer's correspondence , 4th edition 1914
  • Operating conditions in the administrative districts of Swabia and Neuburg , 1914
  • War cripple welfare institutions for agriculture , 1916
  • The future of the rural war invalids , 4th edition 1916
  • Agriculture in the working budget of the German people , 1916
  • The career choice of rural war invalids , 1916
  • The arm and leg injured in agriculture , 1917
  • Agricultural pocket calendar , published in several editions

literature

  • Theophil Gerber: personalities from agriculture, forestry, horticulture and veterinary medicine. Biographical Lexicon. NORA Verlagsgemeinschaft Dyck & Westerheide, Berlin, 3rd ext. Ed., 2008, ISBN 978-3-936735-67-3 , Volume 2: M-Z, p. 485

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address list of the Weinheimer SC. Darmstadt 1928, p. 203.