Hedwig Langecker Explained

Hedwig Langecker
Birth Date:29 January 1894
Birth Place:Bohemia, Austria-Hungary
Death Place:Germany
Nationality:Bohemian, Czech, German
Fields:Pharmacology
Workplaces:German University in Prague, Free University of Berlin
Alma Mater:German University in Prague
Known For:Discovery of pharmacological properties of Polygonatum officinale and Polygonatum multiflorum, studies of steroid hormone biochemistry

Hedwig Langecker (29 January 1894 – 31 January 1989) was a Bohemian, Czech, and German pharmacologist known for her discovery of the pharmacological properties of Polygonatum officinale and Polygonatum multiflorum. She was also known for her studies of steroid hormone biochemistry and her prolific output, which included over 200 scientific articles and several textbooks. Her career began at the German University in Prague, where she earned her M.D. in 1920 and a Ph.D. in 1923, and was habilitated in 1926; Langecker then became a professor and served in that role until 1945. That year, she moved to the Free University of Berlin, where she was a professor until 1959 and an emerita professor until her death in 1989.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ogilvie. Marilyn. Harvey. Joy. Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie . Joy Harvey. The biographical dictionary of women in science. 2000. Routledge. New York [u.a.]. 0-415-92038-8. registration.