BIOLOGIST

Gottlieb Haberlandt

1854 - 1945

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Gottlieb Haberlandt (28 November 1854 – 30 January 1945) was an Austrian botanist. He was the son of European 'soybean' pioneer Professor Friedrich J. Haberlandt. His son Ludwig Haberlandt was an early reproductive physiologist now given credit as the 'grandfather' of the birth control pill. Haberlandt first pointed out the possibilities of the culture of isolated tissues, plant tissue culture. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Gottlieb Haberlandt is the 991st most popular biologist (down from 812th in 2019). (down from 4,121st in 2019)

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Among BIOLOGISTS

Among biologists, Gottlieb Haberlandt ranks 991 out of 1,097Before him are Heinrich Kuhl, Frederic Moore, David Prain, John Cassin, Max Fürbringer, and George Montagu. After him are Herbert Boyer, George Engelmann, Theobald Smith, Samuel Garman, David A. Sinclair, and Ryuta Kawashima.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1854, Gottlieb Haberlandt ranks 117Before him are Jan Sztolcman, Queenie Newall, Takamine Jōkichi, Clorinda Matto de Turner, Dukinfield Henry Scott, and William C. Gorgas. After him are Rafael López Gutiérrez, Hjalmar Mellin, Arthur Barclay, Francis Marion Crawford, Annie Lorrain Smith, and Herbert Gladstone, 1st Viscount Gladstone. Among people deceased in 1945, Gottlieb Haberlandt ranks 337Before him are Ferdinand Kiefler, Lucille La Verne, Wilhelm Wirtinger, Takashi Yokoyama, Charles Williams, and Alexander Patch. After him are Arthur Symons, Jules Pappaert, Cosmo Gordon Lang, Thomas Lewis, Paul Koebe, and Søren Petersen.

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