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  1. Siegfried Samuel Marcus (German: [ˈziːkfʁiːt ˈmaʁkʊs]; 18 September 1831 – 1 July 1898) was a German inventor. Marcus was born of Jewish descent in Malchin, in the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. He made the first petrol-powered vehicle in 1864, while living in Vienna, Austria.

  2. Siegfried Marcus (born Sept. 18, 1831, Malchin, Mecklenburg [Germany]—died June 30, 1898, Vienna, Austria) was an inventor who built four of the world’s earliest gasoline-powered automobiles. Marcus became an apprentice machinist at the age of 12, and five years later he joined an engineering company building telegraph lines.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. May 2, 2024 · A name that often gets sidelined when we talk about the history of automobiles is Siegfried Marcus, a pioneering Austrian inventor who built and operated a road vehicle powered by a four-stroke gasoline engine about 10 to 15 years before Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach, and Carl Benz brought the first practical automobiles to life.

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  5. www.asme.org › landmarks › 203-siegfried-marcus-carSiegfried Marcus Car - ASME

    Direct predecessor of the modern automobile. Siegfried Marcus (1833-1898), a remarkable engineer and manufacturer, lived most of his life and died in Vienna, leaving his most important legacy — an experimental automobile resembling today's modern car and the oldest extant automobile known worldwide. Marcus' second car, built circa 1875 (a ...

  6. www.asme.org › content › siegfried-marcusSiegfried Marcus - ASME

    Jun 1, 2012 · A machine-shop apprenticeship paved the way to a position in the telegraph industry, and his ideas for improved telegraphic relay systems earned wide international acclaim. He was also known for inventing the familiar T-handled plunger apparatus used to detonate explosives in mining and other applications.

  7. Sep 18, 2020 · September 18, 1831 Automotive pioneer Siegfried Samuel Marcus was born in the town of Malchin in the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, which is now part of the Federal Republic of Germany. By the mid-1850s, Marcus had moved to Vienna and worked in that city as a manufacturer of scientific instruments until his death in 1898.…

  8. A campaign to delete mention of the German-born Jew, Siegfried Marcus, from German and Austrian literature and archives was launched by the Nazi regime. It was part of the attempt to destroy all evidence of Judaic creativity. The Nazis were not satisfied with burning books by Jews and the documentation of Jewish works by deleting archival material.

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