List of German inventors and discoverers

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This is a list of German inventors and discoverers. The following list comprises people from Germany or German-speaking Europe, and also people of predominantly German heritage, in alphabetical order of the surname.

More information Existing: ...
Existing:  A B C D E F G H  I   J  K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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A

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Manfred von Ardenne in 1933

B

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Adolf von Baeyer
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Martin Behaims Globe 1493
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Replica of the Benz Patent-Motorwagen built in 1885
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Ludwig Bölkow, instrumental in the development of the Me 262.
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Wernher von Braun
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Robert Bunsen
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Carl von Clausewitz, father of modern military theory.

C

D

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Gottlieb Daimler, co-founder of Mercedes-Benz
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Inventor Caroline Eichler

E

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Albert Einstein in 1921, the year he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics

F

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Emil Fischer

G

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Hans Geiger
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Fagus Factory, designed by Walter Gropius and Adolf Mayer
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Johannes Gutenberg in a 16th-century copper engraving

H

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Otto Hahn, the first man to split the atomic nucleus
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Felix Hoffmann
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Alexander von Humboldt

I

  • Otmar Issing: Economist who invented the "pepet pillar" decision algorithm now used by the ECB.

J

K

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Johannes Kepler
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Monument to Robert Koch on his name square in Berlin.
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Otto Lilienthal

L

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Me 163 Replica designed by Alexander Lippisch.

M

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Karl Marx
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Walther Nernst, Nobel laureate

N

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Hermann Oberth

O

P

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Max Planck

Q

  • Georg Hermann Quincke: German physicist who invented the Quincke's Interference Tube, an apparatus which demonstrates destructive interference of sound waves.

R

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Johann Philipp Reis
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Paul Reuter aged 53 years (1869) by artist Rudolf Lehmann

S

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Hand mit Ringen: print of Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen's first "medical" x-ray, of his wife's hand, taken on 22 December 1895 and presented to Professor Ludwig Zehnder of the Physik Institut, University of Freiburg, on 1 January 1896
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Borosilicate glass as used in chemical labs - Type 3.3 according to (DIN ISO 3585)

T

U

  • Dietrich "Diedrich" Uhlhorn: Engineer, mechanic and inventor, who invented the first mechanical tachometer (1817), between 1817 and 1830 inventor of the Presse Monétaire (level coin press known as Uhlhorn Press) which bears his name.

V

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Rudolf Virchow

W

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Wankel engine, type DKM54 (1957)

X

Y

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Konrad Zuse's Z1; replica in the German Museum of Technology in Berlin

Z

See also

Notes

  1. Albrecht Ludwig Berblinger (1770-1829), known as the "Flying Tailor of Ulm", started with flight experiments in Ulm, Germany, in the early 19th century. He gained experience in downhill gliding with a maneuverable airworthy semi-rigid hang-glider and then attempted to cross the Danube River at Ulm's Eagle's Bastion on 31 May 1811. The tricky local winds caused him to crash and he was rescued by fishermen, making him the first survivor of a water immersion accident of a heavier-than-air manned "flight machine". Though he failed in his attempt to be the first man to fly, Berblinger can be regarded as one of the significant aviation pioneers who applied the "heavier than air" principle and paved the way for the more effective glide-flights of Otto Lilienthal (1891) and the Wright Brothers (1902). Less known are Berblinger's significant contributions to the construction of artificial limbs for medical use, as well as the spring-application in aviation. His invention of a special mechanical joint was also used for the juncture of the wings of his "flying machine". Because of his worthwhile contributions to medicine and flight, in 1993 the German Academy of Aviation Medicine named an annual award for young scientists in the field of aerospace medicine in his honor.

References

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