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  1. Franz Ernst Christian Neumann (30 January 1834 – 6 March 1918) was a German pathologist who was a native of Königsberg. His common name was Ernst Christian Neumann (without Franz at the beginning).

  2. May 19, 2024 · Franz Ernst Neumann (born Sept. 11, 1798, Joachimsthal, Ger.—died May 23, 1895, Königsberg) was a German mineralogist, physicist, and mathematician who devised the first mathematical theory of electrical induction, the process of converting mechanical energy to electrical energy.

  3. His son Carl Gottfried Neumann became in 1858 Privatdozent, and in 1863 extraordinary professor of mathematics at Halle; his younger son Franz Ernst Christian Neumann became professor of medicine in Königsberg.

  4. Biography. Franz Neumann's father, Ernst Neumann, was a farmer who later gave up farming and became an estate agent. Franz's mother was a Countess, who had been divorced, and her parents did not allow her to marry Ernst Neumann, the Countess's factotum, since he was a commoner.

  5. www.chemeurope.com › en › encyclopediaFranz Ernst Neumann

    Franz Ernst Neumann (September 11, 1798 - May 23, 1895) was a German mineralogist, physicist and mathematician. Neumann was born in Joachimsthal, Prussia, located not far from Berlin.

  6. Franz Ernst Christian Neumann (January 30, 1834 - March 6, 1918) was a German pathologist who was a native of Königsberg. In 1855 he obtained his doctorate from Albertina Universität Königsberg, where one of his instructors was Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894).

  7. Ernst Neumann (1834–1918) was a lifelong citizen of Konigsberg, capital of former eastern Prussia, where he was appointed profes-sor of pathology in 1866 (Figure 1). He had done postgraduate studies in Prague and trained with Virchow in Berlin.