Friedrich Karl Ludwig Schädler ( German: Friedrich Karl Ludwig Schädler ; 1813–1884) is a German naturalist and teacher .
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Biography
Friedrich Karl Ludwig Shedler was born in 1813. He studied natural sciences at the University of Giessen .
In the years 1835-1838. was an assistant with Justus von Liebig , then traveled to Europe for scientific purposes; in 1842 he was appointed teacher of natural sciences at the gymnasium in Worms and in 1854 the director of a real school in Mainz [1] .
Of the scientific works of Schödler, his most popular publication was Das Buch der Natur (2 vols, Braunschweig, 1846; 22nd ed., 1884), in which a brief summary of knowledge in all areas of natural science was given. This work was translated into almost all European languages (translation into Russian by D. Panov: “The Book of Nature, or the Encyclopedia of Natural Sciences, etc.”, with many additions, Moscow, 1855). In addition, Friedrich Karl Ludwig Shedler published: “ Chemie der Gegenwart ” (1853) and “Atlas der chemischen Technik” (1873) [1] .
Schädler also published a school edition of Brem’s book: Thierleben (3 vols, 1867–69) and was a contributor to the compilation of Wagner's Handbuch der Naturkunde and Liebig's Handwörterbuch der Chemie [1] .
Friedrich Karl Ludwig Shedler died in 1884.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 Adelung N. N. Shedler, Friedrich-Karl-Ludwig // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron : 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.