Octobre 9 dans l'histoire allemande Octobre 9, 1047
La mort de Suidiger (pape Clement Ii), deuxième pape allemand. Suidiger avait été l'évêque de Bamberg. Il a été installé comme pape par le roi allemand, Heinrich III décembre 25, 1046. Là a eu été trois rivaux réclamant le bureau du pape quand Heinrich III est arrivé à Rome. Il a déposé chacun des trois et a installé Suidiger en tant qu'II clément.) II clément est plus noté pour que ses efforts éliminent simony (les achats et la vente des bureaux d'église). Il convoked le conseil de Rome en 1047. Il est mort en 1047. Il a été enterré à Bamberg et est le seul pape à enterrer en Allemagne.
Octobre 9, 1704
Naissance de von Segner de Johann dans Pressburg, Hongrie (maintenant Slovaquie). Il a découvert le concept de la tension superficielle. Il a enseigné la physique aux universités d'Iéna, de Gttingen et de Halle. Il est mort en 1777 à Halle.
Octobre 9, 1813
Naissance de Georg Waitz dans Flensburg, Allemagne. Un historien, il a développé l'école des medievalists à l'université de Gttingen. Il était le principal praticien des méthodes critiques de Ranke de von de Leopold. Il a également effectué le travail étendu sur la loi constitutionnelle allemande.
Octobre 9, 1833
Naissance d'Eugen Langen à Cologne, Allemagne. He worked with Nikolaus Otto on the development of internal combustion engines. He designed the idea of an overhead monorail. (One was built in Wuppertal, Germany in 1901.)
October 9, 1841
Death of Karl Friedrich Schinkel in Berlin, Germany. Schinkel was a painter and architect. He became the state architect of Prussia in 1815. He designed the Altes Museum, the mausoleum for Knigin Louise and the Werderschekirche in Berlin. He was also active in city planning in Berlin.
October 9, 1852
Birth of Emil Fischer in Euskirchen, Germany. He was given the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1902 for work on sugars and purines. He was professor of chemistry at the University of Berlin.
October 9, 1873
Birth of Karl Schwarzschild in Frankfurt a/M. Schwarzschild was an astronomer whose innovations have continued to have a great impact on 20th century astronomy. His first publication was at age 16. He was a professor of astronomy at the University of Gttingen by 28. His hypothesis of stellar motion is critical to statistical methods in astronomy. He gave the first exact solution to Einstein's general gravitational equations. He pioneered work on black holes. He died as a soldier in WWI at age 43.
October 9, 1925
Death of Hugo Preuss in Berlin, Germany. Preuss, a political theorist, was the primary author of the constitution of the Weimar Republic (Germany between WWI and WWII).
October 9, 1936
Death of Otto Benhagel in Munich, Germany. Benhagel was a professor of German at the universities of Heidelberg, Basel, and Giessen. His most noted work is the compilation of a four volume work on German language usage from the 8th through the 20th centuries, Deutsche Syntax (1923-1932). He also wrote Die deutsche Sprache (1886) and Geschichte der deutschen Sprache (1901).
October 9, 1950
Death of Nicolai Hartmann in Riga, Latvia. Hartmann, a philosopher was a professor at the universities of Marburg, Cologne, Berlin and Gttingen. He started his career as a Neo-Kantian but drifted away from those ideas by the time of the publication of his Neue Wege der Ontologie (1942).
October 9, 1974
Death of Oscar Schindler who outwitted the Nazis and saved more Jews from the gas chambers than any other during World War II.
October 9, 1982
Death of Anna Freud in London (born in Vienna). She was the youngest daughter of Sigmund Freud. She started her adult life as an elementary school teacher and observed the children with an interest in psychology she had learned from her father. She became the founder of child psychoanalysis. In 1938 she fled Austria with her father and settled in London.
October 9, 1988
Death of Felix Wankel in Lindau, Germany. He is the inventor of the Wankel engine, a rotary design automobile engine bought and developed by Mazda.
October 9, 1989
There are mass demonstrations in Leipzig. The chant for the evening is, "Wir sind das Volk".
October 9, 1992
Willy Brandt (Herbert Ernst Karl Frahm) dies in Unkel, Germany. He had just started university studies when, in 1933, the Nazis came to power. As a Social Democrat, he was under pressure and fled Germany. It was at that time that he took the name Willy Brandt. He spent the duration of World War II in Norway and Sweden. He returned to Germany at the end of the war and was elected to parliament in 1949. In 1957 he became the mayor of West Berlin (1957-66). While he was mayor the Berlin Wall was built. He became the foreign minister and vice-chancellor in the "Grand Coalition" in 1966. In 1969 he became the chancellor. As chancellor he pursued the "Ostpolitik" and laid the groundwork for the eventual reunification of the two Germanys. He resigned as chancellor in 1974 when he learned that a close aid, Gunther Guillaume had been functioning as a spy for East Germany. He won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1971.
October 9, 2005
Clemens August Graf von Galen (1878-1946) is beatified by Pope Benedict XVI. Von Galen was the Bishop of Munster during the dictatorship of Adolf Hitler. He openly opposed policies of the Nazis as an affront to human dignity. Am 16.Marz 1946 auf dem Domplatz in Munster: „Mein Recht und meine Aufgabe war es, zu sprechen. Und ich habe gesprochen, fur euch, fur Unzahlige, die hier versammelt sind, fur Unzahlige in unserem lieben deutschen Vaterland. Und Gott hat es gesegnet.“ Und er rief den Menschen zu: „Dass ihr hinter mir standet, und dass die damaligen Machthaber wussten, dass, wenn sie den Bischof schlugen, das ganze Volk sich geschlagen gefuhlt hätte, das ist es, was mich au?erlich geschutzt hat, was mich aber auch innerlich gestarkt und mir Zuversicht gegeben hat.“
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