August Schlickum Explained

August Schlickum (7 August 1867, in Winningen – 28 May 1946, in Cologne) was a German schoolteacher and naturalist.

Personal life

Schlickum's father, Oskar Schlickum (1838–1869) and grandfather, Julius Schlickum (1804–1884) were both pharmacists and amateur botanists.

Education

Schlickum studied natural sciences and mathematics at the universities of Bonn, Zürich, Berlin and Marburg, receiving his teaching degree at the latter institution in 1893.

Career

Schlickum then served as an assistant under Arthur Meyer at the botanical institute in Marburg, followed by work as an instructor at schools in Aachen (1896) Essen (1897–98) and Düsseldorf (1898–99). From 1899 to 1932 he was a gymnasium teacher in Cologne.[1]

In addition to his duties as a teacher, he carried out research in the fields of geology, paleontology and botany. In collaboration with Wiesbaden physician Karl Touton, he participated in scientific investigations of the Rhineland and the Allgäu. He supplied Touton with many Hieracium specimens from the Rhine area and was instrumental in the naming of a number of taxa within the genus. The subspecific epithet of schlickumianum honors his name.[1]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. https://www.bgbm.org/sites/default/files/documents/Vol%2B31%2Bp%2B433-441.pdf The Hieracium collection of August Schlickum
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=xvtUAAAAMAAJ&dq=%22August+Schlickum%22&pg=PA341 The microscopy of technical products
  3. http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=au%3ASchlickum%2C+August%2C&qt=hot_author WorldCat Search