Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Count Friedrich Carl Eugen Vsemir von Berchtold, baron von Ungarschitz ( Czech: Bedřich Karel Eugen Všemír Berchtold hrabě z Uherčic; 25 October 1781 – 3 April 1876), was a German-speaking Bohemian physician and botanist from Austrian descent.

    • Bercht.
    • 3 April 1876 (aged 94), Buchlovice
  2. Friedrich von Berchtold (1781–1876) was a practicing physician with a strong interest in botany and natural history. In the 1830s he left his medical practice and traveled extensively in Europe, the Orient and Brazil (1836–1855).

  3. People also ask

  4. Apr 17, 2024 · Leopold, Graf von Berchtold was an Austro-Hungarian foreign minister whose ultimatum to Serbia (July 23, 1914) was followed (August 1) by the outbreak of World War I. A wealthy landowner in Hungary and Moravia, Berchtold, through marriage, became one of the richest men in Austria-Hungary.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Friedrich Graf von Berchtold. Friedrich Graf von Berchtold, Freiherr von Ungarschitz (tschechisch: Bedřich Karel Eugen Všemír (Wssemjr) hrabě von Berchtold, svobodný pán z Uherčic; * 25. Oktober 1781 in Stráž nad Nežárkou Böhmen; † 3. April 1876 in Buchlovice Mähren ), Sohn des Oberstleutnants und Bergrates Prosper Anton v.

  6. Science, biology. Published. 1820, 1823–1835. Media type. Print. O Přirozenosti Rostlin ( On the Nature of Plants) is a Czech botanical text written by Friedrich von Berchtold and Jan Svatopluk Presl, and published in Prague in 1820. [1] A later expanded edition in three volumes was published between 1823 and 1835.

    • Botanical classification
    • Czech
  7. www.historyofscience.cz › katalog_en › indexLive Map: e-atlas

    Friedrich von Berchtold (1781–1876) studied medicine, although he did not pursue a medical career for long, as he devoted himself primarily to botany. He discovered a number of plant species and focused on botanical research, specialising particularly in farm crops.

  8. Aug 17, 2019 · Joseph by the dying Alois Lexa von Aehrenthal, the count had earlier refused—on grounds of inexperience—the Kaiser’s plea to become his chief minister. “Count Berchtold had his faults,” a critic once noted, “but ambition was not among them.” But when pressed anew in mid-February, Berchtold

  1. People also search for