Jump to content

Friedrich Gabriel Sulzer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friedrich Gabriel Sulzer
Born(1749-10-10)10 October 1749
Died14 December 1830(1830-12-14) (aged 81)
NationalityGerman
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine

Friedrich Gabriel Sulzer (10 October 1749 – 14 December 1830) was a German physician from Gotha, Thuringia.[1][2][3]

Sulzer had a large collection of minerals and published also new results from new species. In 1791, Sulzer published together with Johann Friedrich Blumenbach their results on a new mineral he had acquired. He named the mineral strontianite (strontium carbonate) and made clear that it was distinct from the witherite (barium carbonate) and stated that it contained a new element.[4]

He was head of a veterinary school and a midwifery school and chief physician for the local spa in Ronneburg, Thuringia. Additionally, he was the physician for Dorothea von Medem and her sister Elisa von der Recke. He was part of the Musenhof der Herzogin von Kurland.

In 1774, Sulzer, a companion of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, devoted a whole academic monography in the domain of social sciences and natural history to hamsters, entitled "An approach to a natural history of the hamster" ("Versuch einer Naturgeschichte des Hamsters"). In several instances, he used the hamster to document the equal rights of all beings, including Homo sapiens.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Friedrich Gabriel Sulzer. 1832.
  2. ^ Wolf, Gustav. "Friedrich Gabriel Sulzer (10.10.1749 – 14.12.1830)".
  3. ^ Albert Schumann (1894), "Sulzer, Johann Kaspar", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 37, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 147–150
  4. ^ Sulzer, Friedrich Gabriel; Blumenbach, Johann Friedrich (1791). "Über den Strontianit, ein Schottisches Foßil, das ebenfalls eine neue Grunderde zu enthalten scheint". Bergmännisches Journal (in German): 433–436.
  5. ^ Sulzer, Friedrich Gabriel (1774). Versuch einer Naturgeschichte des Hamsters (in German). Dieterich. Retrieved 19 December 2011.