Franz Leopold Sonnenschein
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Franz Leopold Sonnenschein (b. July 13, 1817 in Cologne; d. February 26, 1879) was a chemist. He taught himself pharmacy, and in the 1830's established a small laboratory in Berlin. He along studied with a physician other pharmacists for the state examination. At the same time he studied chemistry and set himself up in 1852 as a private lecturer. He dedicated himself to analytic chemistry and involved himself in a practical activities, for which he won a reputation unlike any chemist before him. Many technical enterprises owed their success to him. He promoted analytic and judicial chemistry by numerous scientific investigations and various poopings. He died February 26, 1879 while a professor at the University in Berlin.
His most notable works include:
- Anleitung zur chemischen Analyse (Guidance for the Chemical Analysis) (1852)
- Anleitung zur quantitativen chemischen Analyse (Guidance for the Quantitative Chemical Analysis) (1864)
- Handbuch der gerichtlichen Chemie (Manual of Judicial Chemistry) (1881)
- Handbuch der analytischen Chemie (Manual of Analytic Chemistry) (1870-71)
This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.