Julius von Braun (chemist)

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Julius Jacob von Braun (born July 26, 1875 in Warsaw ; died January 8, 1939 in Heidelberg ) was a German chemist.

Life

Julius Braun was born as the son of the doctor Johannes von Braun and the Jewish Alexandra Rosenblut. He passed his matriculation examination in 1893 at the humanistic grammar school in Warsaw. He then studied chemistry at the University of Göttingen , the Royal Technical University of Charlottenburg and the University of Munich . In Göttingen he received his doctorate in 1898 under Otto Wallach .

In 1898 he became an assistant at the Chemical Institute in Göttingen, and in 1902 private lecturer . In 1909 he became an associate professor at the University of Breslau . In 1915 he registered as a war volunteer, from 1915 he was head of administration of the General Government of Warsaw . Between 1918 and 1921 he was a professor at the Agricultural University in Berlin , in 1921 he moved to the University of Frankfurt am Main as a full professor of chemistry .

In 1935 he was dismissed as a Jew under the Law Restoring the Civil Service . He then founded a chemical research facility in Heidelberg .

Braun had married in 1903 and the couple had four children.

Several of the reactions he discovered bear his name, such as the Rosenmund-von-Braun reaction and the Von-Braun reaction .

Works (selection)

  • About the isomeric pulegones . WF Kaestner, Göttingen 1898 (dissertation).
  • Inorganic Chemistry Textbook . Leipzig 1925.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. biographical data, publications and Academic pedigree of Julius von Braun at academictree.org, accessed on 14 January 2018th