Joachim-Friedrich Langlet

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Joachim-Friedrich Langlet (born June 12, 1906 in Berlin , † September 2, 1979 in Kiel ) was a German university lecturer for animal breeding and keeping.

Life

Langlet's parents were the farmer Arthur Langlet, manor manager on Groß Latzkow ( Pyritz district ), and his wife Dorothea, née. Meubrink.

Langlet attended the Askanische Gymnasium in Berlin , then the Bismarck Gymnasium . After graduating from high school at Easter 1926, he completed an agricultural apprenticeship. From the winter semester 1927/28 to the summer semester 1929 he studied agricultural sciences at the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena . He became active in the Corps Franconia Jena . It was reciprocated on June 9, 1928 and inactivated on June 1, 1929 . From the court day of the beer state zu Wöllnitz on July 19, 1929 it emerged as "Popp CLII". From the winter semester 1929/30 to the winter semester 1930/31 he studied at the Friedrichs University in Halle . After the diploma examination he received a scheduled assistant position at the Institute for Animal Breeding and Dairy Production in Halle. Research assistant at the University of Halle since 1931, he was promoted to Dr. sc. nat. PhD. The faculty awarded the work with the Julius Kühn Prize. In 1935 he came to the Prussian Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests as a state-certified animal breeding officer , which had just been merged with the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture . The activity brought him to Pomerania and Brandenburg . He had served in the Reichswehr and until 1936 did military exercises with two cavalry regiments (3 and 10). He became sergeant major. R. and Reserve Officer Candidate (ROA).

In 1937 Langlet qualified as a professor at the Natural Science Faculty of the University of Halle. He expected that his appointment as a private lecturer by the National Socialist German Lecturer Association would be thwarted by the rector Johannes Weigelt . That is why he had tried to use it abroad. At the Sheep Breeding Association of South West Africa , he became managing director and breeding director in Windhoek in 1938 . In 1940 he was interned in South West Africa and later in the Transvaal . In 1944 he returned to Germany as part of a prisoner exchange . Due to mutual commitments by the exchange powers, military operations were no longer possible. In autumn 1944 he headed the sheep breeding association in Bavaria. From December 1944 he was chief executive officer of the Reich Association of German Sheep Breeders , whose headquarters he moved to Halle (Saale) at the end of the war . In June 1945 he was entrusted with the management of the director of the Institute for Animal Breeding and Dairy Industry and appointed as a private lecturer . The provincial government issued the Venia legendi retrospectively to 1937. The appointment as associate professor in Halle dragged on until September 1946 due to membership in the Sturmabteilung . Langlet refused a call to Jena. The appointment as full professor for animal breeding followed in October 1946. From 1947 Langlet was massively attacked by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany . On the one hand, his brother Ernst-Günther (born June 13, 1912), an assistant doctor at the Medical Polyclinic in Halle, killed himself in Soviet custody at the end of September 1949. On the other hand, Langlet sought restitution from the property of the sheep farmers' association; A point of contention became the Halle wool trade hall , which had become the property of Siebel Flugzeugwerke .

Langlet left the German Democratic Republic in May 1950 . The return to South West Africa failed. On October 23, 1950 he married Helga Dietz v. Baier born Hartmann (1924-2009). The marriage resulted in two sons and a daughter. The German Research Foundation awarded Langlet a research assignment that took him to North Frisia . The Association of German Sheep Breeding Associations (VDL) in Bonn-Bad Godesberg elected him as managing director in 1952. The Christian Albrechts University in Kiel appointed him to the chair for animal breeding and husbandry in 1954 . In 1957/58 and 1965/66 he was dean of the natural science faculty. In 1974 he retired. Even before the ribbon was awarded, Langlet was respected by Corps Holsatia as a paternal mentor for the active and inactive.

Honors

See also

literature

  • Kürschner's German Scholars Calendar
  • JF Langlet on the occasion of his 70th birthday on June 12, 1976 (series of publications by the Institute for Animal Breeding and Animal Husbandry of the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Volume 1), Kiel undated; 36 sheets ( ISSN  0720-4272 )

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Pictures of Life: Archive Corps Franconia-Jena (Regensburg).
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 26/721.
  3. ^ Horst Gärtner : Obituary Joachim Langlet . The nettle leaf. News sheet of the old and young Holsaten (Kiel) 49 (1979) 1, pp. 5-7.
  4. Dissertation: Studies on the inheritance and dependence of fertility in sheep . Julius Kühn Archive (Berlin) 36 (1933) 3, pp. 125-230.
  5. Habilitation thesis: Inheritance of the body and wool characteristics in the most important male bloodlines of the Central German merino meat breeding . Julius Kühn Archive 43 (1937) 3, pp. 50-308.
  6. J. Langlet: The Karakulzucht in Southwest Africa . Julius Kühn Archive 47 (1938) 5, pp. 198-349.
  7. Werner Buchholz (Ed.): The University of Greifswald and the German university landscape in the 19th and 20th centuries. Colloquium of the Chair of Pomeranian History at the University of Greifswald in conjunction with the Society for University and Scientific History . Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004, ISBN 978-3-515-08475-8 , pp. 371 ( preview in Google Book search).
  8. catalogus-professorum-halensis.de
  9. Halle professor catalog
  10. Kiel list of scholars
  11. For the rescue of a woman from the Baltic Sea.
  12. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 78 , 660.