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  1. Mathilde Carmen Hertz. Mathilde Carmen Hertz (14 January 1891 – 20 November 1975) was a biologist, and was one of the first influential women scientists in the field of biology and a pioneer in the field of comparative psychology. Working in Germany, her career started to unravel in 1933 due to her Jewish ancestry. [1]

  2. HERTZ, MATHILDE CARMEN. ( b. Bonn, Germany, 14 January 1891; d. Cambridge, United Kingdom, 20 November 1975), Gestalt psychology, comparative psychology, sensory physiology. Hertz was a pioneering comparative psychologist. She fused psychological and biological perspectives in her research, and contemporary psychologists and biologists alike ...

  3. When Mathilde Carmen Hertz was born on 14 January 1891, in Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, her father, Heinrich Rudolf Hertz, was 33 and her mother, Elisabetha Amalie Katharina Doll, was 26. She lived in Chesterton, Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom in 1939.

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  5. Dr Mathilde Carmen Hertz Birth 14 Jan 1891. Bonn, Stadtkreis Bonn, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany Death 20 Nov 1975 (aged 84) Cambridge, City of Cambridge ...

  6. Letter to Adams, Walter 1933-1936, 1935-11-08. Item. Reference Code: GBR/0012/MS Add.7653/1/i/A/10. Scope and Contents Rutherford introduces [Mathilde] Hertz, daughter of [Heinrich Hertz], who has some Jewish ancestry and who cannot now live in Germany. As a zoologist 'of standing', Rutherford encloses a letter from Professor [Augustus Daniel ...

  7. Tierpsychologin und Sinnesphysiologin Mathilde Hertz (1891-1975)” (1996, pp. 229-262) [On the Accountable, Though Unaccounted for Abrupt End of a Career – The Animal Psychologist and Sensory Physiologist Mathilde Hertz (1891-1975)]. Mathilde Carmen Hertz was born on

  8. Mathilde Carmen Hertz (1891–1975), German zoologist Taxon names authored (List may be incomplete) 21 taxon names authored by Mathilde Carmen Hertz; Publications [edit] (List may be incomplete) 1927 [edit] Hertz, M.C. 1927a. Die Ophiuroiden der Deutschen Südpolar-Expedition. Deutsche Südpolar-Expedition 1901-1903, 19. Zoologie. 11: 1-54.