Hermann Grossmann (chemist)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hermann Grossmann (also Großmann ; until 1902 Herrmann Itzig ; born September 17, 1877 in Berlin ; † after 1939) was a German chemist.

He attended the Realgymnasium in Berlin from 1884 to 1896 and then studied in Munich, Berlin and Erlangen. In Erlangen it was 1899, a work of some complexe salts of tartaric acid and malic acid of high specifischer rotation PhD . From 1900 to 1904 he was an assistant at the chemical institute at the University of Münster. In 1906 he completed his habilitation at the University of Berlin with an inaugural speech on the importance of chemical technology in German economic life and became a private lecturer there . From 1913 he was adjunct professor , in 1921 he received an extraordinary professorship .

In April 1933 he was given leave of absence as a Jew under the Professional Civil Service Act .

Grossmann probably emigrated to Persia and was professor at the University of Tehran from 1934.

Fonts

  • The chemical industry in the United States and German trade relations, based on official material. 1912.
  • The methods of determination of nickel and cobalt and their separation from the other elements. Stuttgart 1913.
  • with Albert Hesse : England's trade war and the chemical industry. Ferdinand Enke, Stuttgart 1915. ( Archive )
  • Foreign language reader for chemists. Leipzig 1920.
  • Nitrogen industry and world economy. Stuttgart 1926.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Who is it? 10th edition 1935
  2. Salomon Wininger: Great Jewish National Biography. I. Addendum in Volume 7, 1935
  3. a b Biographical handbook of German-speaking emigration after 1933. Volume 2, 1983.
  4. a b German Biographical Encyclopedia, Volume 4, 1999, ISBN 3-598-23186-5 , p. 197
  5. The information on the place of emigration Tehran is first found in 1983 in the Biographical Manual of German-speaking Emigration after 1933 and then in several other works. In the Berlin address book, in which Grossmann was listed as a house owner until 1939 (address: Charlottenburg, Mecklenburgallee 15), his whereabouts are given as Brussels from 1935 onwards . Theo Mackeben had lived in the house since 1936 in his absence .
  6. ^ Tilmann Buddensieg , Kurt Düwell, Klaus-Jürgen Sembach: Sciences in Berlin, Volume 1, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-7861-1504-4 , p. 130