Georg Friedrich Hänle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Georg Friedrich Hänle (born January 6, 1763 in Lahr ; † June 23, 1824 in Karlsruhe ) was a German pharmacist who was very interested in science and the father of Christian Friedrich Hänle .

Life

First he attended grammar school in Buchweiler, then studied for four years in Strasbourg and then conditioned as an assistant in Darmstadt , Zweibrücken and Stuttgart . From 1785 he studied medicine at the “ducal Hohen Carlsschule” in Stuttgart , but had to break off his studies in order to take over the pharmacy in Lahr that he inherited from his mother . In 1785 he passed his exam there, which authorized him to run the pharmacy. Three years later he took over the lower pharmacy in Lahr and handed it over to his son Christian in 1815.

Although the authorities and ministries forbade him to do so, he built a pharmacy in Kehl in 1815 , which was taken over by his son-in-law H. Wolf after its completion.

From the philosophy faculty of the University of Erlangen he was awarded the degree of Dr. phil. and Master of the Liberal Arts. In his old age, Hänle lived in Karlsruhe and was appointed Grand Ducal Medical Councilor in 1823 .

As a scientifically very interested pharmacist, he published his “chemical-technical treatises”, the “draft for a general and permanent pharmacist tax” (1818) and a “magazine for the latest experiences, discoveries and corrections in the field of pharmacy ...” (1823 / 24) and made a name for itself in specialist circles.

literature

Fonts

  • Chemical-technical treatises. 4 ribbons, Frankfurt a. M. (1808-1821)
  • Draft for a general and consistent pharmacist's tax with fully developed and precisely calculated tables. Frankfurt a. M. (1818)
  • Textbook of pharmacist's art. Leipzig (1820–1822) [the 2nd volume, 3rd section, continued and ended by JB Trommsdorff in 1826]
  • Magazine for the latest inventions, discoveries and corrections in the field of pharmacy ... 6 Bd. Karlsruhe (1823 to June 1824) [continued by Ph. L. Geiger as a magazine of pharmacy ]

source