Elisabeth Schiemann

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Elisabeth Schiemann (15 August 1881 – 3 January 1972) was a German geneticist, crop researcher and resistance fighter in the Third Reich.

Background and Education

Elisabeth Schiemann, daughter of the historian Theodor Schiemann, lived in Berlin from 1887. Elisabeth was part of the first generation of women in Germany who were permitted to study and pursue independent careers as academics - although initially in a limited capacity.

She attended a seminar for teachers and stayed on in Paris for a several years to study language. Subsequently she worked for a few years as a teacher in a girls' school. From 1908 she studied at the University of Berlin and earned her doctorate there in 1912 with a thesis on mutations in Aspergillus; her supervisor was Erwin Baur.

Botany

Academic career

From 1914 to 1931 she was senior assistant at the Institute for Genetics, directed by Erwin Baur at the Agricultural University of Berlin. She habilitated in 1924 with a thesis on the genetics of winter and summer barley. As a Privatdozentin at the Agricultural University, she lectured on seed science and reproductive biology although her actual field of research was the history of cultivated plants.

From 1931 to 1943 Elisabeth Schiemann worked as guest scientist at the Berlin-Dahlem Botanical Institute. Her book Entstehung der Kulturplanzen (Origin of cultivated plants) was published in 1932, becoming a reference work in the field of cultivated plants and bringing her international recognition. In 1943 she published a further fundamental treatise about her new research under the same name in the journal Ergebnisse der Biologie (Advances in Biology). In 1931, she habilitated into the Philosophy faculty of Berlin University. She openly spoke out against the so-called racial politics of National Socialism and its pseudo-scientific vulgar-Darwinism, against the persecution of Jews and abolition of the multi-party system. This put her in conflict with the regime and in 1940 after a denunciation and dispute over her professorship position, her Venia legendi was withdrawn.[2]

In 1943, Elisabeth Schiemann took over management of an independent crop history department at the newly-founded "Kaizer-Wilhelm Institute of Crop Plant Research" in Tuttenhof, Austria (although her department was in Berlin). In 1946 she received a professorship (with full teaching responsibilities) at the reopened Berlin University. She had to give up this professorship in 1949 due to the Cold War. She was able to continue her research in makeshift premises. In 1948 the crop history department together with its counterpart in Berlin-Dahlem, still called Kaiser-Wilhem Institute transferred to the newly founded foundation "German Research University". From 1952 until 1956, Elisabeth Schiemann directed this department as a research centre for the Max Planck Society. After her retirement in 1956, the department disbanded.

Awards

Elisabeth Schiemann received several awards for her scientific work. In 1953 she became a Scientific Member of the Max Planck Society (as the first scientist since 1945). In 1945 she received the Cross of Merit (Officer's Cross) of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. In the same year she became an honorary member of the Société botanique de France, in 1956 a member of the Leopoldina in Halle.[3] In 1959, Leopoldina awarded her with the Darwin Plaque (as the only woman among 18 scientists). In 1962, she received an honorary doctorate from the Agricultural faculty of the Technical University of Berlin: the first woman to receive this honour. In 2003, Falkenberg (Berlin) named a street after her: Elisabeth-Schiemann-Strasse.

Resistance Activities

Elisabeth Schiemann actively spoke up for those persecuted by those persecuted by the nazi regime. She belonged to a network of sympathetic women, which included among others, the resistance member and pastor Elisabeth Schmitz. Alongside Schmitz, Elisabeth and her sister Gertrude were members of the Confessing Church in Dahlem (Berlin).

Elisabeth dedicated herself to writing to ministers and pastors of the Confessing Church, urging them to be more outspoken in their condemnation of the Nazi regime, and to governmental ministers protesting treatment of emigrating Jews. She helped sisters Valery and Andrea Wolfstein evade deportation and defended jewish colleagues attending scientific symposia.

She maintained a close friendship with the physicist Lise Meitner who had escaped in July 1938. This is evidenced by an extensive, decades-long, largely preserved correspondence. After the end of World War II, there was a conflict between the pair about the motives/causes of the Nazi regime, the lack of widespread resistance against the regime amongst the German population, about the future of a new Germany and the importance of dealing with the Nazi past.

On 16 December 2014, Yad Vashem honored her as a "Righteous among the Nations".[4]

References

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