Marie Daiber

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marie Daiber, 1914

Marie Daiber (born August 24, 1868 in Esslingen , † July 6, 1928 in Genoa ) was a German zoologist. In 1913 she was the first woman to acquire a Venia legendi at the Philosophical Faculty II of the University of Zurich .

life and work

Marie Daiber spent her youth in Stuttgart, where her father had been teaching science at the Katharinenstift since 1870 . She graduated from the school at Katharinenstift and the affiliated teachers' seminar and then worked as a private teacher for ten years. University studies began in Oxford , before settling in 1899 at the University of Zurich enrolled . In 1904 Marie Daiber did her doctorate under Arnold Lang . In the same year she took up an assistant position at the Zoological Institute of the University of Zurich. Until her promotion to the institute's prosector in 1909, she also worked at the Concilium Bibliographicum .

In 1913, Marie Daiber completed her habilitation at the University of Zurich and was given a teaching position in comparative embryology . From 1914 she was also entrusted with the zootomic microscopic training course. In recognition of her services to the Zoological Institute, she was appointed adjunct professor in 1922 . Marie Daiber wrote a large number of chapters in the volume " Anthropoda " of Arnold Lang's Handbook of the Morphology of Invertebrates and was involved in his research in the field of experimental heredity .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Equal Opportunities UZH: Female Professors and Lecturers 1892 to 1983. September 4, 2017, accessed on September 19, 2019 .
  2. ^ Dossier: Daiber, Marie, 1868–1928, Zoology, Comparative Anatomy. UZH archive . Signature: AB.1.0170. link
  3. Anthropoda . In: Arnold Lang (Hrsg.): Handbook of the morphology of invertebrates . Continued by Karl Hescheler . tape  4 . Gustav Fischer, Jena 1921 ( Biodiversity Heritage Library ).
  4. ^ Karl Hescheler: Nekrolog Marie Daiber . In: Annual report of the University of Zurich . tape 1928/29 . Orell Füssli, Zurich 1929, p. 63–64 ( archiv.uzh.ch [PDF]).