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The Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium (CPR) is a freely accessible online catalogue of all professors at the University of Rostock from 1419 to the present. Each entry documents a professor's biographical data and scientific achievements and is linked with further digitized resources such as photographs or handwritten documents. The project has not yet been finished. The CPR currently provides more than 2,200 individual-level records that can be fully researched. [1] The application of Integrated Authority Files (GNDs) automatically interlinks the Catalogus with further external web resources (e.g. the Rostock Matrikelportal) and vice versa.
Daniel Georg Morhof was a German writer and scholar.
Carl Wilhelm von Zehender was a German ophthalmologist born in Bremen.
Franz Eilhard Schulze was a German anatomist and zoologist born in Eldena, near Greifswald.
Karl Dietrich Gerhard Barfurth was a German anatomist and embryologist born in Dinslaken.
Ernst Hans Ludwig Krause was a German physician, botanist and mycologist.
Magnus Pegel was a German doctor and mathematician. Pegel was born in Rostock in Pomerania/Germany and was one of the first authors to write about the theory of blood transfusions. He died at Stettin.
Ferdinand Albert Thierfelder was a German pathologist born in Meissen. He was the son of Stadtphysikus Johann Gottlieb Thierfelder (1799–1867), and was a younger brother to internist Theodor Thierfelder (1824–1904).
Benjamin Theodor Thierfelder was a German internist born in Meissen. He is remembered for contributions made in research of Fieberkurve involving typhoid fever.
Carl Watzinger was a German-born archaeologist, who with Ernst Sellin, worked on uncovering the site of the ancient city of Jericho (1907–09), and earlier, with Heinrich Kohl (1877–1914), conducted excavations at Capernaum (1905).
Wenceslaus Johann Gustav Karsten was a German mathematician. In 1768, Karsten published a graphic representation of infinitely many logarithms of real and complex numbers.
Julius August Christian Uffelmann was a German physician and hygienist born in Zeven.
The Rostock Matrikelportal disseminates about 186,000 individual-level datasets drawn from the student registers of the University of Rostock from its establishment in 1419 to today. Each entry is faithfully transcribed and linked with a digitized image of a student's original, partly handwritten register entry. Users may search and comment on individual entries thus expanding the information on single students. Places of origin are geo-tagged and displayed on interactive maps. Additional links refer to professors that were active at the time of matriculation and lectures held. Integrated Authority Files (GNDs) identify notable students and interlink them with further personal data web portals and platforms on the Internet.
Franz Eugen Geinitz was a German geologist and mineralogist best known for his geological studies of the Mecklenburg region. He was the son of geologist Hanns Bruno Geinitz.
Paul Trendelenburg was a German pharmacologist.
Karl Grünberg was a German otorhinolaryngologist, known for his research on the pathological anatomy of the ear's labyrinth.
Christian Lemcke was a German otolaryngologist, known for his efforts in the development of otolaryngology as a single specialty at the University of Rostock.
Walter Albert Ferdinand Brunn was a German surgeon and historian of medicine.
Brigitte Sarry was a German chemist and a professor at the Technical University of Berlin.
Paul Schulze was "the most important German tick taxonomist of the early 20th century." Between 1929 and 1937, he described 19 genera, 17 subgenera, 150 species and 150 subspecies of ixodid ticks. He was essentially an amateur taxonomist, working alone for most of his career, not consulting the major tick collections or collaborating with other tick taxonomists.
Dorothee D. Haroske is a German mathematician who holds the chair for function spaces in the Institute of Mathematics of the University of Jena.
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