Von roemer and biography

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Lucien von Römer

Dutch physician, botanist and writer (1873–1965)

Lucien Sophie Albert Marie von Römer (23 August 1873 – 23 December 1965) was a Dutch physician, botanist and writer. He often wrote about homosexuality, and argued that it was an innate characteristic. He practiced medicine in the Dutch East Indies (later Indonesia) in his later life. His views parallel those of psychiatrist Sigmund Freud on this topic.

Netherlands

Lucien von Römer was born in 1873 in Kampen, Overijssel, Netherlands in to a prominent military family of German heritage. He studied medicine at Leiden University and the University of Amsterdam, and received his medical license in 1903.[1] He went on to practice as a neurologist.[2]

Von Römer was particularly interested in homosexuality, and worked in Berlin with the prominent sexologistsMagnus Hirschfeld and Albert Moll.[1] He was a regular contributor to Hirschfeld's journal, Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen (Journal for Sexual Transitions); his first article, a profile of KingHenry III of France

Ferdinand von Roemer

German geologist (1818–1891)

Carl Ferdinand von Roemer (5 January 1818 – 14 December 1891), German geologist, had originally been educated for the legal profession at Göttingen, but became interested in geology, and abandoning law in 1840, studied science at the University of Berlin, where he graduated Ph.D. in 1842.[1]

Two years later he published his first work, Das Rheinische Ubergangsgebirge (1844), in which he dealt with the older rocks and fossils. In 1845 he paid a visit to America, and devoted a year and a half to a careful study of the geology of Texas and other Southern states. He published at Bonn in 1849 a general work entitled Texas, while the results of his investigations of the Cretaceous rocks and fossils were published three years later in a treatise, Die Kreidebildungen von Texas und ihre organischen Einschlusse (1852), which also included a general account of the geology, and gained for him the title Father of the geology of Texas.[1][2]

Subsequently, he published at BreslauDie Silurische Fa

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