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German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina

The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (German: Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina – Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften), short Leopoldina, is the national academy of Germany, and is located in Halle (Saale). Founded on 1 January 1652, based on academic models in Italy, it was originally named the Academia Naturae Curiosorum until 1687 when Emperor Leopold I raised it to an academy and named it after himself.[1] It was since known under the German name Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina until 2007, when it was declared to be Germany's National Academy of Sciences.[1]

German National Academy of Natural Sciences Leopoldina
Main building of Leopoldina in Halle
Founded1 January 1652, Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation
TypeNational academy (since 2007)
Location
Servicesscholarships, awards, consultation, research
Fieldsscience, academics
Members
1,600 members
Key people
Gerald Haug (President)
Websiteleopoldina.org

History edit

 
Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire
 
Miscellanea Curiosa (1692)
 
An illustration of the Acta Eruditorum of 1712 where the Naturae Curiosorum Ephemerides were published

The Leopoldina was founded in the imperial city of Schweinfurt on 1 January 1652 under the Latin name Academia Naturae Curiosorum, sometimes translated into English as "Academy of the Curious as to Nature."[2] It was founded by four local physicians- Johann Laurentius Bausch, the first president of the society, Johann Michael Fehr, Georg Balthasar Metzger, and Georg Balthasar Wohlfarth; and was the only academy like it at the time making it the oldest academy of science in Germany.[1] The archives of Leopoldina are some of the oldest in the world based on the fact that the records date back to the 17th century. These records will provide a window into the German sciences of the last 350 years.[1]

In 1670, the society began to publish the Ephemeriden or Miscellanea Curiosa, one of the earliest scientific journals and one which had a particularly strong focus on medicine and related aspects of natural philosophy, such as botany and physiology.[3], pp. 7–8 It was recognized by Emperor Leopold I who raised it to an academy in 1677, and then declared it an Imperial Academy in 1687, naming it Sacri Romani Imperii Academia Caesareo-Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum and allowing it to carry his name.[3][4]

 
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina

At first, the society conducted its business by correspondence and was located wherever the president was working.[3], pp. 8–9 After Schweinfurt, the Academy was rooted in many places before it was permanently located in Halle in 1878. Following Schweinfurt in chronological order: Nuremberg, Augsburg, Altdorf, Erfurt, Halle, Nuremberg, Erlangen, Bonn, Jena, Dresden, and finally Halle.[1][3], pp. 8–9

There were many efforts during years of national prosperity to elevate the Academy to the status of a 'national institute,' but all such early efforts failed. In those times the Academy was not on the nation's agenda at a political or academic level. Later, however, its members began to enrich the Academy with an obligation to be present at its proceedings so as to improve their public standing. Thus they began to hold regular monthly meetings, even in the challenging conditions of 1924,[3], pp. 8–9 which had to be attended by all local members.[1]

When Adolf Hitler became Germany's Chancellor in 1933, the Leopoldina started to exclude its Jewish members.[1] Albert Einstein was the first victim because of public pressure. 1938 followed a declaration to the Nazi government, that all jewish members had been excluded, while in reality the index cards of around 70 members just got hid behind a curtain, no official member lists got published anymore and the cards got reintegrated one day after the german capitulation.[5] Eight of them were murdered by the Nazis over the course of World War II.[6] Nevertheless, the Leopoldina did not suffer as much influence from the Nazi regime as other German academies, thanks to the president of the Leopoldina at the time, Emil Abderhalden.[1] While Jewish members were 'officially' expelled, the president of the Leopoldina made sure it did not go to the lengths that other academies went to at the time, the expelled did not even get a notification about the matter, still received the member magazines and did not get exposed in the public by a statement of the society.[5][1] He resisted the Nazi pressures by reorganizing Sections of the Academy and introducing a new series 'Biographies of German Natural Scientists' in 1932.[7]

After World War II, Halle became part of East Germany. During this time, the German Democratic Republic shut down all societies, leading the members of the Leopoldina to meet unofficially and in private. Efforts were made to reestablish the Academy, however. An edition of Goethe's 'The Works of Science' began to be edited under the Academy's name in 1947, and lectures started again in 1948. However, the Academy was not officially reopened until 1952. This reopening came just in time for the Academy to celebrate its tercentenary.[8]

After reopening, the Leopoldina successfully resisted attempts from the German Democratic Republic to reconstitute the Academy as a specifically East German institute and continued to think of itself as an institution for the whole of Germany. This was greatly affected by the building of the Berlin Wall in August 1961. The Academy was able to stay independent of national politics, which allowed it to bridge East and West Germany through scientific ideas.[1] The yearly meeting of the Academy was planned for October of that year in West Germany; invitations had been sent out in June announcing that they would be discussing energy; but less than two months later letters of cancellation were sent out, stating that members living in the GDR would not be given permission to travel.[8]

In 1991, after German reunification, the Leopoldina was granted the status of a non-profit organisation. It is funded jointly by the German government and the government of the state of Saxony-Anhalt.[3], pp. 10–14 A new section was also created for the history of culture with the emphasis on medicine and the natural sciences.[1]

In November 2007, German science minister Annette Schavan announced the renaming of the Leopoldina to "German Academy of Sciences" (Deutsche Akademie der Wissenschaften), and said that "due to its international prestige, the Leopoldina is predestined to represent Germany within the circle of international academies." Karsten Jedlitschka says that the Academy was named the first national science Academy in Germany in February 2008.[1] As the German Academy of Sciences, it is a counterpart to the rights and responsibilities of institutions such as Britain's Royal Society and the United States' National Academy of Sciences. As the national academy, the Leopoldina will act as a consulting service on matters of science and science related policy for the German government, including parliament and social and political organizations.[1]

Activities edit

The Leopoldina is the first and foremost academic society in Germany to advise the German government on a variety of scientific matters, for instance on climate change and disease control.

The Leopoldina gives conferences and lectures and continues to publish the Ephemeriden under the name Nova Acta Leopoldina. It issues various medals and awards, offers grants and scholarships and elects new members to itself. The Academy also maintains a library and an archive and it also researches its own history and publishes another journal, Acta Historica Leopoldina devoted to this subject.[3], pp. 15–33

Consistently with its national preeminence, it also collaborates extensively with other learned societies in international exchanges of ideas and policy recommendations. Details of such initiatives are included on its multilingual website.

Honours edit

Apart from being a fellow, excellence can also be rewarded by receiving one of the following honours:

  • honorary membership
  • Cothenius Medal (first awarded in 1792)
  • Carus Medal (first awarded in 1896)
  • Schleiden Medal (first awarded in 1955)
  • Mendel Medal (since 1965, in honour of Gregor Mendel)
  • Darwin Badge (only awarded in 1959 – the centenary of the publication of The origin of species)
  • Leopoldina Prize for Junior Scientists
  • Georg Uschmann Prize for History of Science
  • Leopoldina Research Prize (since 2001, funded by the Commerzbank Foundation)
  • Thieme Prize of the Leopoldina for Medicine
  • Medal of Merit (awarded by the Presidium only on special occasions)
  • Greve Prize (first awarded in 2022)

Membership edit

 
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Three quarters of the members are from German-speaking countries (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) and one quarter from about 30 other nations.[1] The election to membership of the Leopoldina is the highest academic honour awarded by an institution in Germany. Some laureates are also fellows of the Leopoldina.[9]

Among the most noted of fellows are for instance:[8][10]

Members might also attribute discoveries and success to the academy. For example, the asteroid 893 Leopoldina is named in its honour.

Leadership edit

 
Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber

At the head of the Academy there is a Presidium, elected by the Senate, consisting of the President, acting as the chair, four Vice Presidents, and other members at large. These position terms are five years long and can only be held twice by the same person. The Senate of the Academy currently consists of 39 members representing different sections and disciplines of science, as well as representatives from Switzerland and Austria. Senate members serve for four years and can only be re-elected once. The latest President of the Academy, Gerald Haug, from Berlin, became the Academy's 27th president when he took office on 1 March 2020.[10]

Past presidents of the Leopoldina with time and place of office:

See also edit

  • Acatech – German's national academy of science and engineering

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jedlitschka, Karsten (20 June 2008). "The Archive of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in Halle (Salle): more than 350 year of the history of science". Notes & Records of the Royal Society. 62 (2): 237–244. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2007.0009 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ As for instance in the monumental A History of Magic and Experimental Science by Lynn Thorndike (see online).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Self-produced overview of the Leopoldina (accessed 29 April 2016)
  4. ^ Groschenheft magazine on the Leopoldina's anniversary (German) 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 27 May 2005)
  5. ^ a b Sybille Gerstengarbe (1994), "Die Leopoldina und ihre jüdischen Mitglieder im Dritten Reich", Jahrbuch 1993, Leopoldina (in German), vol. R. 3, Jg. 39, Halle
  6. ^ Speech of Leopoldinas president Volker ter Meulen 2009 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "German Academy of Scientists Leopoldina". mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  8. ^ a b c Fortsch, Eckart (1999). Science Under Socialism: East Germany in Comparative Perspective. Harvard University Press. pp. 158–179.
  9. ^ . leopoldina.org. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  10. ^ a b "Presidium". www.leopoldina.org. Retrieved 19 March 2020.

External links edit

german, national, academy, sciences, leopoldina, leopoldina, academy, sciences, redirects, here, university, wrocław, leopoldina, university, german, deutsche, akademie, naturforscher, leopoldina, nationale, akademie, wissenschaften, short, leopoldina, nationa. Leopoldina academy of sciences redirects here For the University of Wroclaw see Leopoldina university The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina German Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften short Leopoldina is the national academy of Germany and is located in Halle Saale Founded on 1 January 1652 based on academic models in Italy it was originally named the Academia Naturae Curiosorum until 1687 when Emperor Leopold I raised it to an academy and named it after himself 1 It was since known under the German name Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina until 2007 when it was declared to be Germany s National Academy of Sciences 1 German National Academy of Natural Sciences LeopoldinaMain building of Leopoldina in HalleFounded1 January 1652 Holy Roman Empire of the German NationTypeNational academy since 2007 LocationHalle GermanyServicesscholarships awards consultation researchFieldsscience academicsMembers1 600 membersKey peopleGerald Haug President Websiteleopoldina wbr org Contents 1 History 2 Activities 3 Honours 4 Membership 5 Leadership 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire nbsp Miscellanea Curiosa 1692 nbsp An illustration of the Acta Eruditorum of 1712 where the Naturae Curiosorum Ephemerides were published The Leopoldina was founded in the imperial city of Schweinfurt on 1 January 1652 under the Latin name Academia Naturae Curiosorum sometimes translated into English as Academy of the Curious as to Nature 2 It was founded by four local physicians Johann Laurentius Bausch the first president of the society Johann Michael Fehr Georg Balthasar Metzger and Georg Balthasar Wohlfarth and was the only academy like it at the time making it the oldest academy of science in Germany 1 The archives of Leopoldina are some of the oldest in the world based on the fact that the records date back to the 17th century These records will provide a window into the German sciences of the last 350 years 1 In 1670 the society began to publish the Ephemeriden or Miscellanea Curiosa one of the earliest scientific journals and one which had a particularly strong focus on medicine and related aspects of natural philosophy such as botany and physiology 3 pp 7 8 It was recognized by Emperor Leopold I who raised it to an academy in 1677 and then declared it an Imperial Academy in 1687 naming it Sacri Romani Imperii Academia Caesareo Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum and allowing it to carry his name 3 4 nbsp German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina At first the society conducted its business by correspondence and was located wherever the president was working 3 pp 8 9 After Schweinfurt the Academy was rooted in many places before it was permanently located in Halle in 1878 Following Schweinfurt in chronological order Nuremberg Augsburg Altdorf Erfurt Halle Nuremberg Erlangen Bonn Jena Dresden and finally Halle 1 3 pp 8 9There were many efforts during years of national prosperity to elevate the Academy to the status of a national institute but all such early efforts failed In those times the Academy was not on the nation s agenda at a political or academic level Later however its members began to enrich the Academy with an obligation to be present at its proceedings so as to improve their public standing Thus they began to hold regular monthly meetings even in the challenging conditions of 1924 3 pp 8 9 which had to be attended by all local members 1 When Adolf Hitler became Germany s Chancellor in 1933 the Leopoldina started to exclude its Jewish members 1 Albert Einstein was the first victim because of public pressure 1938 followed a declaration to the Nazi government that all jewish members had been excluded while in reality the index cards of around 70 members just got hid behind a curtain no official member lists got published anymore and the cards got reintegrated one day after the german capitulation 5 Eight of them were murdered by the Nazis over the course of World War II 6 Nevertheless the Leopoldina did not suffer as much influence from the Nazi regime as other German academies thanks to the president of the Leopoldina at the time Emil Abderhalden 1 While Jewish members were officially expelled the president of the Leopoldina made sure it did not go to the lengths that other academies went to at the time the expelled did not even get a notification about the matter still received the member magazines and did not get exposed in the public by a statement of the society 5 1 He resisted the Nazi pressures by reorganizing Sections of the Academy and introducing a new series Biographies of German Natural Scientists in 1932 7 After World War II Halle became part of East Germany During this time the German Democratic Republic shut down all societies leading the members of the Leopoldina to meet unofficially and in private Efforts were made to reestablish the Academy however An edition of Goethe s The Works of Science began to be edited under the Academy s name in 1947 and lectures started again in 1948 However the Academy was not officially reopened until 1952 This reopening came just in time for the Academy to celebrate its tercentenary 8 After reopening the Leopoldina successfully resisted attempts from the German Democratic Republic to reconstitute the Academy as a specifically East German institute and continued to think of itself as an institution for the whole of Germany This was greatly affected by the building of the Berlin Wall in August 1961 The Academy was able to stay independent of national politics which allowed it to bridge East and West Germany through scientific ideas 1 The yearly meeting of the Academy was planned for October of that year in West Germany invitations had been sent out in June announcing that they would be discussing energy but less than two months later letters of cancellation were sent out stating that members living in the GDR would not be given permission to travel 8 In 1991 after German reunification the Leopoldina was granted the status of a non profit organisation It is funded jointly by the German government and the government of the state of Saxony Anhalt 3 pp 10 14 A new section was also created for the history of culture with the emphasis on medicine and the natural sciences 1 In November 2007 German science minister Annette Schavan announced the renaming of the Leopoldina to German Academy of Sciences Deutsche Akademie der Wissenschaften and said that due to its international prestige the Leopoldina is predestined to represent Germany within the circle of international academies Karsten Jedlitschka says that the Academy was named the first national science Academy in Germany in February 2008 1 As the German Academy of Sciences it is a counterpart to the rights and responsibilities of institutions such as Britain s Royal Society and the United States National Academy of Sciences As the national academy the Leopoldina will act as a consulting service on matters of science and science related policy for the German government including parliament and social and political organizations 1 Activities editThe Leopoldina is the first and foremost academic society in Germany to advise the German government on a variety of scientific matters for instance on climate change and disease control The Leopoldina gives conferences and lectures and continues to publish the Ephemeriden under the name Nova Acta Leopoldina It issues various medals and awards offers grants and scholarships and elects new members to itself The Academy also maintains a library and an archive and it also researches its own history and publishes another journal Acta Historica Leopoldina devoted to this subject 3 pp 15 33Consistently with its national preeminence it also collaborates extensively with other learned societies in international exchanges of ideas and policy recommendations Details of such initiatives are included on its multilingual website Honours editApart from being a fellow excellence can also be rewarded by receiving one of the following honours honorary membership Cothenius Medal first awarded in 1792 Carus Medal first awarded in 1896 Schleiden Medal first awarded in 1955 Mendel Medal since 1965 in honour of Gregor Mendel Darwin Badge only awarded in 1959 the centenary of the publication of The origin of species Leopoldina Prize for Junior Scientists Georg Uschmann Prize for History of Science Leopoldina Research Prize since 2001 funded by the Commerzbank Foundation Thieme Prize of the Leopoldina for Medicine Medal of Merit awarded by the Presidium only on special occasions Greve Prize first awarded in 2022 Membership edit nbsp Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Three quarters of the members are from German speaking countries Germany Austria Switzerland and one quarter from about 30 other nations 1 The election to membership of the Leopoldina is the highest academic honour awarded by an institution in Germany Some laureates are also fellows of the Leopoldina 9 Among the most noted of fellows are for instance 8 10 Christian Ludwig Brehm Adolf Butenandt James B Conant Manfred Eigen Albert Einstein excluded 1933 for being Jewish Gerhard Ertl Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Ernst Haeckel Otto Hahn Theodor W Hansch Paula Hertwig Joseph Lister Alexander Oparin Wilhelm Ostwald Max Planck Carl Friedrich von Weizacker Members might also attribute discoveries and success to the academy For example the asteroid 893 Leopoldina is named in its honour Leadership edit nbsp Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber At the head of the Academy there is a Presidium elected by the Senate consisting of the President acting as the chair four Vice Presidents and other members at large These position terms are five years long and can only be held twice by the same person The Senate of the Academy currently consists of 39 members representing different sections and disciplines of science as well as representatives from Switzerland and Austria Senate members serve for four years and can only be re elected once The latest President of the Academy Gerald Haug from Berlin became the Academy s 27th president when he took office on 1 March 2020 10 Past presidents of the Leopoldina with time and place of office 1652 1665 Johann Lorenz Bausch Schweinfurt 1666 1686 Johann Michael Fehr Schweinfurt 1686 1693 Johann Georg Volckamer Nurnberg 1693 1730 Lukas Schrock Augsburg 1730 1735 Johann Jakob Baier Altdorf bei Nurnberg 1735 1769 Andreas Elias von Buchner Erfurt Halle 1770 1788 Ferdinand Jakob Baier Nurnberg 1788 1791 Heinrich Friedrich Delius Erlangen 1791 1810 Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber Erlangen 1811 1818 Friedrich von Wendt Erlangen 1818 1858 Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck Erlangen Bonn Breslau 1858 1862 Dietrich Georg Kieser Jena 1862 1869 Carl Gustav Carus Dresden 1870 1878 Wilhelm Friedrich Behn Dresden 1878 1895 Hermann Knoblauch since then Halle 1895 1906 Karl von Fritsch Halle 1906 1921 Albert Wangerin Halle 1921 1924 August Gutzmer Halle 1924 1931 Johannes Walther Halle 1932 1950 Emil Abderhalden Halle Zurich 1952 1953 Otto Schluter Halle 1954 1974 Kurt Mothes Halle 1974 1990 Heinz Bethge Halle 1990 2003 Benno Parthier Halle 2003 2010 Volker ter Meulen Halle 2010 2020 Jorg Hacker Halle 2020 present Gerald Haug Halle See also editAcatech German s national academy of science and engineeringReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jedlitschka Karsten 20 June 2008 The Archive of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in Halle Salle more than 350 year of the history of science Notes amp Records of the Royal Society 62 2 237 244 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2007 0009 via JSTOR As for instance in the monumental A History of Magic and Experimental Science by Lynn Thorndike see online a b c d e f g Self produced overview of the Leopoldina accessed 29 April 2016 Groschenheft magazine on the Leopoldina s anniversary German Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed 27 May 2005 a b Sybille Gerstengarbe 1994 Die Leopoldina und ihre judischen Mitglieder im Dritten Reich Jahrbuch 1993 Leopoldina in German vol R 3 Jg 39 Halle Speech of Leopoldinas president Volker ter Meulen 2009 Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine German Academy of Scientists Leopoldina mathshistory st andrews ac uk Retrieved 10 April 2020 a b c Fortsch Eckart 1999 Science Under Socialism East Germany in Comparative Perspective Harvard University Press pp 158 179 Nobelpreistrager leopoldina org Archived from the original on 22 July 2019 Retrieved 2 March 2014 a b Presidium www leopoldina org Retrieved 19 March 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina Official website in German and English Miscellanea curiosa on the Biodiversity Heritage Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina amp oldid 1217453940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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