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German Chemical Society Deutsche chemische Gesellschaft

At the turn of the century, the academic-industrial symbiosis still primarily consisted of its classical core, which had developed in the course of the nineteenth century, mainly in the coal-tar dye industry. That core lay in a threefold relationship, each dimension reinforcing the other. The first dimension grew out of personal ties between industrial chemists and their friends and collaborators in academe, often former mentors as exemplified in the relationship of A. W. von Hofmann and Carl Martius of the AG fiir Anilinfabrikation (Agfa) dye works these ties were maintained and formalized by professional organizations like the Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaft (DCG or German Chemical Society, fd. 1867) and the Verein Deutscher Chemiker (VDC or Association of German Chemists, fd. 1887 as... [Pg.17]

But in comparative perspective, the growth of the Societe chimique was not impressive. Its German and British sister societies, the Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaft and the Chemical Society of London, each had more than 3100... [Pg.96]

Deutsche chemische Gesellschaft German Chemical Society DCG 1867 ... [Pg.115]

German Chemical Society, see Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaft German Electrochemical Society, see Deutsche Elektrochemische Gesellschaft German Society for Applied Chemistry, see Deutsche Gesellschaft fiir angewandte Chemie... [Pg.374]


See other pages where German Chemical Society Deutsche chemische Gesellschaft is mentioned: [Pg.301]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.138]   


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Deutsche chemische Gesellschaft Society

GERMAN CHEMICAL

German 1914 Society

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