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April 10 in German History
--------------------------------- April 10, 1727
Birth of Samuel Heinicke in Nautschütz,
Germany. Heinicke became interested in the problems of the
deaf after reading Surdus loquens, a book in which it
was described how a Swiss physician had succeed in teaching
deaf persons to speak. In 1778 he opened a school for the
deaf. He developed the system of teaching lip-reading as
opposed to signs, since he felt it was best for the deaf to
understand language as normally used in society at large.
April 10, 1775
Birth of Samuel Hahnemann in Meissen,
Germany. Hahnemann completed his M.D. at the University of
Erlangen in 1779. Hahnemann through his studies created the
medical system now known as homeopathy. It is based on the
idea that small doses of toxins have curative powers. His
theory is contained in the book Organon der rationellen
Heilkunst (1810). He was driven out of Leipzig by the
medical establishment and moved to Paris where he was quite
popular.
April 10, 1829
Birth of Johannes Janssen in Xanten,
Germany. Janssen is noted for his eight volume Geschichte
des deutschen Volkes seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters (1876-1894).
The history made important contributions to German cultural
history and especially 15th century studies, but since the
viewpoint was quite blatantly pro Catholic and anti
Protestant, the book became quite a controversial matter.
April 10, 1835
Birth of Henry Villard in Speyer, Germany.
Villard changed his name from Ferdinand Hilgard when he
immigrated to the United States in 1853. In the U.S. he wrote
first for German-American newspapers and later by larger
mainstream papers including The New York Herald and The
New York Tribune. He bought The New York Evening Post in
1881. He then turned to investments in railroads and became
the president of the Oregon and California Railroad and the
Oregon Steamship Company. In 1881 he gained control of the
Northern Pacific. In 1889 he founded the Edison General
Electric Company and later changed its name to the General
Electric Company in 1893.
April 10, 1877
Birth of Alfred Kubin in Leitmeritz,
Austria-Hungary (now in the Czech Republic). Kubin was a
painter noted for his morbid, neurotic subjects. He studied
art in Munich and spent most of his life in Zwickledt,
Austria.
April 10, 1883
Birth of Robert Faesi in Zürich,
Switzerland. Faesi wrote plays, poetry, short stories and
literary criticism. He was a professor of German literature
at the University of Zürich. Among his literary works are, Aus
der Brandung (1917), Füsilier Wipf (1917), Züricher
Idylle (1908) and Die Stadt der Väter, Die Stadt der
Freiheit, Die Stadt des Friedens (3 vols. 1941-52). He
wrote the libretto for Willy Burkhard's opera, Die
schwarze Spinne. His published correspondence with Thomas
Mann appeared in 1962.
April 10, 1920
Death of Moritz Benedikt Cantor in
Heidelberg, Germany. Cantor was a professor of mathematics at
the University of Heidelberg. He is considered one of the
greatest historians of mathematics.
April 10, 1924
Death of Hugo Stinnes in Berlin, Germany.
An Industrialist, Stinnes beginning with a modest operation
established by his grandfather (Stinnes Konzern) in coal
mining, expanded the business to include steel mills, banks,
and electrical companies as well as transportation (Hugo
Stinnes GmbH). During World War I he profited greatly from
the supply of war materials. A member of the Deutschnationale
Volkspartei, he was elected to parliament in the early years
of the Weimar Republic.
April 10, 1951
The West German parliament passes the
Montanmitbestimmungsgesetz, a law giving German workers a
voice in the decision making processes of companies in the
iron, steel and coal industries.
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