Difference between revisions of "Rudolf Martin"
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| birth_date = 1864 | | birth_date = 1864 | ||
| death_date = 1925 | | death_date = 1925 | ||
| − | | address = University of Zurich [ | + | | address = University of Zurich [1897]<br />16 Neue Beckenhofstrasse, Zurich [1905, 1915]<br />22 rue Jacques, Boijceau, Versailles [1911]<br />c/o Dr Otto Schlagenbaufeu, 94 Susenbergstrasse, Zurich [1917] |
| − | | occupation = | + | | occupation = anthropologist |
| elected_ESL = | | elected_ESL = | ||
| elected_ASL = | | elected_ASL = | ||
| − | | elected_AI = 1897 | + | | elected_AI = 1897.01.12 |
| elected_APS = | | elected_APS = | ||
| elected_LAS = | | elected_LAS = | ||
| membership = Hon. Fellow | | membership = Hon. Fellow | ||
| − | | left = | + | | left = 1925 deceased |
| clubs = | | clubs = | ||
| societies = | | societies = | ||
| Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
=== House Notes === | === House Notes === | ||
| − | + | 1896.12.08 nominated as an Honorary Fellow<br />death reported in Report of the Council for 1925<br />obituary in Man 1925 | |
=== Notes From Elsewhere === | === Notes From Elsewhere === | ||
Rudolf Martin (1 July 1864 – 11 July 1925) was a Swiss anthropologist, specializing in physical anthropology.<br /><br />Martin, Rudolf<br />Born July 1, 1864, in Zürich; died July 11, 1925, in Munich. German anthropologist.<br />Martin was a professor at the universities of Zurich (1899-1911) and Munich (from 1917). He created the modern methods of anthropological research, expanding and improving the earlier methods of P. Broca. Martin’s technique of measuring the skull, bones, and the human body as a whole and the instruments developed by him were universally accepted. His anthropological studies of the indigenous population of Tierra del Fuego (1893) and the Malays of the Malacca Peninsula (1905) are well known.<br /> | Rudolf Martin (1 July 1864 – 11 July 1925) was a Swiss anthropologist, specializing in physical anthropology.<br /><br />Martin, Rudolf<br />Born July 1, 1864, in Zürich; died July 11, 1925, in Munich. German anthropologist.<br />Martin was a professor at the universities of Zurich (1899-1911) and Munich (from 1917). He created the modern methods of anthropological research, expanding and improving the earlier methods of P. Broca. Martin’s technique of measuring the skull, bones, and the human body as a whole and the instruments developed by him were universally accepted. His anthropological studies of the indigenous population of Tierra del Fuego (1893) and the Malays of the Malacca Peninsula (1905) are well known.<br /> | ||
Latest revision as of 09:58, 22 January 2021
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
1896.12.08 nominated as an Honorary Fellow
death reported in Report of the Council for 1925
obituary in Man 1925
Notes From Elsewhere
Rudolf Martin (1 July 1864 – 11 July 1925) was a Swiss anthropologist, specializing in physical anthropology.
Martin, Rudolf
Born July 1, 1864, in Zürich; died July 11, 1925, in Munich. German anthropologist.
Martin was a professor at the universities of Zurich (1899-1911) and Munich (from 1917). He created the modern methods of anthropological research, expanding and improving the earlier methods of P. Broca. Martin’s technique of measuring the skull, bones, and the human body as a whole and the instruments developed by him were universally accepted. His anthropological studies of the indigenous population of Tierra del Fuego (1893) and the Malays of the Malacca Peninsula (1905) are well known.
Publications
External Publications
Lehrbuch der Anthropologie in systematischer Darstellung, 3rd ed. vols. 1-4. Stuttgart, 1957-64.
