Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 April 2018 Gerhard Wagenitz (1927–2017)
Hans Walter Lack, Volker Wissemann
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Citation: Lack H. W. & Wissemann V.: Gerhard Wagenitz (1927–2017). — Willdenowia 48: 147–160. doi: https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.48.48111

Version of record first published online on 5 April 2018 ahead of inclusion in April 2018 issue.

Gerhard Wagenitz passed away on 30 January 2017, just a few months before his ninetieth birthday. He was the doyen of plant taxonomy in Germany, a professor emeritus of Göttingen University and a full member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences. In a unique way GW combined several qualifications: he was a world authority in Compositae, an outstanding connoisseur of the history of biology in general and of plant taxonomy in particular, and a very active academic teacher with no fewer than three of his many students currently holders of university chairs. In addition to his many activities at Göttingen University, including his role as the head of its herbarium for many years, GW left behind an extremely rich and diverse scientific oeuvre of the highest profile. It covers an unconventionally broad spectrum of topics with his Wörterbuch der Botanik [Dictionary of Botany] as his most influential publication. For eleven years, from 1958 until 1969, GW had been a member of staff of the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem, a period of his long life emphasized to a certain degree in this obituary.

The early years

GW was born in Potsdam in Germany on 31 May 1927 as the only child of Hermann Wagenitz, a Lyceal-Oberlehrer [senior teacher at a lyceum] in Potsdam and owner of a tree nursery in Eiche, now part of Potsdam, and his wife Martha (called Magda) née Waak. Clearly influenced by his parents he developed an early interest in botany. From his father, who had joined the Botanischer Verein der Provinz Brandenburg in 1921 and who was to die when his son was only five years old, GW learned as his first scientific names Digitalis purpurea and Coccinellia septempunctata. His mother, who had attended a practical course in plant determination given at Munich University in 1913 by Gustav Hegi (the author of Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa), acted as a competent nature guide for her son. Unsurprisingly, GW, like his father, began to collect plants, to prepare herbarium specimens at the age of five and learned from his mother how to determine them. According to GW's personal recollections about his youth he “always read very much”, a character trait that remained dominant until the last weeks of his long life and was also strongly influenced by his mother. She had studied mathematics and physics at Göttingen University under such luminaries as David Hilbert and Max Born and had started to teach at a gymnasium in Uelzen, but after her marriage had had to give up her position because at that time husbands and wives were not both allowed to be employed by the state. It was only several years after the death of her husband that Magda, who did not remarry, started to teach her two subjects once more, thereby providing the material basis for Gerhard and herself.

Fig. 1.

Gerhard Wagenitz in the Old Botanic Garden of Göttingen University, 2016. — Photograph: Uwe Wagenitz.

f01_147.jpg

In 1937, GW, aged ten, was sent for the next few years to the Realgymnasium [secondary school] in Potsdam's Kaiser-Wilhelm-Allee, a period of his life overshadowed by the political realities of the time. For all pupils, joining the Deutsches Jungvolk [German Youngsters] and subsequently the Hitlerjugend [Hitler Youth] was compulsory, with the latter including straightforward pre-military training. Not being athletic, Gerhard was scolded. However, there was plenty of time for him to read many books, among them several biology text books from his father's library, and these Gerhard enjoyed tremendously. His mother clearly had negative views about Nazism, but because of the extremely effective oppression could not be a declared opponent of the system. It was his mother who taught him how to use his father's Leitz microscope and how to determine plants with the help of Karl Kraepelin's Exkursionsflora von Nord- und Mitteldeutschland. She generously allowed her son also to make chemical experiments in their flat, including some admittedly dangerous ones. Two weeks after the defeat of the German army in Stalingrad [now Wolgograd], Gerhard, aged 15, and his classmates were conscripted Flakhelfer, i.e. they belonged to the auxiliary staff of the German Luftwaffe, and underwent recruitment training in Nauen, a town northwest of Berlin. There, GW experienced the drill and nonsensical rhetoric typical of every military system, especially of the German one at that time. In parallel with the training, the number of lessons was steadily being reduced because of frequent alarms caused by air raids. In early September 1944, GW was demobilized, but periods soon followed, first in a Wehrertüchtigungslager [defense training camp] belonging to the Hitler Youth and after that conscripted labour in the Reichsarbeitsdienst [Reich Labour Service], According to his recollections, GW was by then convinced that the war was lost for Germany.

The difficult years

On 6 January 1945 GW, aged 17, was conscripted as a soldier to do service in a machine gun company based in the town of Brandenburg, west of Potsdam, where he experienced the final months of the Second World War with all its indescribable chaos. Around 26 April near Rathenow, GW was lightly wounded on his right hand, but he had to continue westwards as fast as possible in order to avoid contact with the victorious Soviet army, which was approaching from the east. The fear was of becoming a Soviet prisoner of war, with the very real danger of being sent to Siberia. GW finally reached Zerbst, a town that had just surrendered to US troops on 28 April 1945. In this he was extremely lucky — only a few days later, on 6 May, Zerbst was handed over to Soviet troops. On 8 May, the unconditional surrender of the German Reich was signed in Berlin ending in a sense the Second World War in Europe. Difficult weeks followed: GW, now a prisoner of war, was handed over from the US Army to British troops, and marched westwards via Magdeburg to the tiny village of Weferlingen in what is now Lower Saxony. There he was released from captivity in mid-July 1945 and was given permission to continue to Celle, then in the British zone of Germany, where one of his uncles lived. Looking back, GW was happy not to have been allowed by the British authorities to return directly to Potsdam, which may well have brought him into Soviet confinement. It was in Celle that GW passed his Abitur in March 1946, and two months later he was back in Potsdam, where fortunately his mother had survived the final months of the war unharmed. This return journey of c. 180 km lasted no less than twenty-three days because, in agreement with the decisions reached at the Yalta Conference, Germany had been divided into four allied occupation zones: GW had to pass from the British into the Soviet Zone which meant, among others, quarantine in Erfurt, forced labour for the Soviet authorities in Beelitz, and all kinds of controls and delays, in order to reach his very severely destroyed home town Potsdam, where he arrived on 18 May 1946.

As a student in Berlin and Göttingen

Having survived the inferno, GW took up employment as a garden worker in the well-known nursery of Karl Förster in Bornim, now part of Potsdam, where he had to dig over the ground, cart soil and compost, weed and tidy the beds and cut flowers, the latter a job in retrospect he regarded as the most pleasant one. However, all this was not the kind of occupation GW wished to have for long and therefore in the summer of 1946 he sent an application for admission to Berlin University. This was successful and upon matriculation he solemnly shook hands with Johannes Stroux, the first post-war Rektor [Vice Chancellor], then part of the tradition of welcoming incoming students. In Berlin GW found himself in a very complex situation.

Firstly Berlin, like the rest of Germany, was divided into four sectors, though in 1946 people, goods and traffic could still move freely from one sector to another with the Reichsmark being the only currency. However, the main building of Berlin University on the boulevard Unter den Linden was situated in the Soviet sector of the city, while several other university institutions, among them the Botanic Garden and the Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem (BGBM), were situated in the US sector. Furthermore the US Military Government as a result of their right of occupation had unilaterally removed the BGBM from the Berlin University in March 1946 and placed it under the administration of the magistrate of Berlin, i.e. the city of Berlin. In short, the institution no longer belonged to Berlin University. Secondly, the academic staff of Berlin University had been severely depleted by the Second World War and its consequences, which meant a very reduced academic programme of lectures, practical courses and excursions, and there was hardly any fixed curriculum. This went hand in hand with extremely meagre resources resulting in academic teaching based on blackboard and chalk only, without the assistance of text books, demonstration charts or slides - even pen and paper were quite scarce. Thirdly, many buildings were severely war-damaged, and this applied both to the main building of Berlin University and the Botanical Museum. In March 1947, GW was conscripted to labour input - he mixed mortar and taped stones for the reconstruction of the ruined main university building on Unter den Linden, a fact he recollected whenever he passed by.

In addition, there were more prosaic realities: food was extremely difficult to come by in Berlin, and GW noted in his recollections that “it was always a problem to eat one's fill”. However, in his sober way he also noted that he was more fortunate than others — he had relatives outside town who were ready to help with food and he occasionally received food packets sent from South Africa. Heating in winter was another problem. GW had rented a room in Driesener Straße, but only the tenant's kitchen could be heated, and in the evenings he sat on the slowly cooling hotplate his feet wrapped up in a blanket. The well-heated Amerikahaus in the US Sector was a heaven where GW enjoyed reading in a more comfortable atmosphere.

Commencing in the winter term of 1946–1947 at Berlin University, GW studied botany and zoology with an emphasis on the latter field. This had several reasons: one was that he was already familiar with many aspects of botany, in particular the vascular flora of Central Europe; another was the lack of a full professor in plant taxonomy - since the death of Ludwig Diels in November 1945 his position had not yet been filled. In GW's recollections, the BGBM played no significant role — the herbarium, library and conservatories had largely been destroyed, the Botanical Museum was partly in ruins, only a plant determination course given by Hermann Otto Sleumer is mentioned as having taken place in this building. In contrast, GW noted many details on the lectures and practical courses, as a rule in rooms hardly heated during winter, given by the zoologists Günter Tembrock, Werner Ulrich and, in particular, the plant physiologist Kurt Noak, who taught general botany.

Judging from GW's recollections, he very much enjoyed the botanical excursions because they helped him to extend his already profound knowledge of species diversity. These tours brought him into the surroundings of Berlin, to the island of Hiddensee in the Baltic Sea, and to the Kyffhäuser, a hill range southeast of the Harz Mountains, all situated in the Soviet Zone and at that time still freely accessible. On one of these excursions led by the bryologist Hermann Reimers he realized his preference for botany over zoology. It was also on one of these tours that GW met Ruth Heinecke from Berlin-Friedrichsha-gen and soon fell in love with her; she was later to become his wife and the mother of their three sons.

Meanwhile, the views of the four allies over the future of Germany had continued to become more and more divergent, with the subsequent crisis culminating in the Berlin Blockade, i.e. the Western allies being denied the railway, road and canal access to their sectors in Berlin. In the end this conflict resulted in (1) the creation of the Federal Republic of Germany on 24 May 1949, agreed on by the three Western military commanders for Germany, and (2) the creation of the German Democratic Republic on 7 October 1949, agreed on by the Soviet Military Administration in Germany. By contrast, the future destiny of Berlin, which belonged neither to the Federal Republic of Germany nor to the German Democratic Republic, remained unresolved or, in modem political terminology, a frozen conflict. This was the beginning of what would become the division of Germany, resulting in the infamous Berlin Wall, which came to an end only in the Treaty on the Final Settlement with respect to Germany signed by the Four Allies and the two German States and taking effect on 15 March 1991.

Living in the Soviet sector of Berlin, GW had not been affected by the Berlin blockade, but he already felt the growing political pressure on students and may have realized the political difficulties and dangers to come. Changing from the Berlin University, which had already been renamed Humboldt University, to the Freie Universität Berlin (FUB), founded on 4 December 1948 in the American sector, was not an attractive option for GW — the academic programme for botany was still meagre and in the winter term of 1959–1960 comprised introductory courses only. Instead, and following the role model of his mother, GW decided to continue his botanical studies at Göttingen University, where he found in Franz Firbas a professor who supported him in his botanical studies and in his Celle-based uncle a relative who supported him financially. In short, GW like many of his generation went west.

After having attended the two Botanische Großpraktika [Monday to Saturday full-day practical courses in botany], where the emphasis was on preparing very accurate drawings, a course in plant geography, excursions into the surroundings of Göttingen and, in spring 1951, to Lake Garda (which for GW was a sensation as he never had been south of the Alps), he prepared under the supervision of Firbas his Staatsexamensarbeit on pollen diversity in Valerianaceae. This was a kind of diploma thesis acting as one of the prerequisites for being admitted to the written and oral exams that were needed to become a teacher at a secondary school. At that time, GW obviously contemplated continuing the teaching tradition of his family. However, Firbas had other plans: he suggested to GW, who had passed the Staatsexamen with best marks in 1952, that he undertook a doctoral thesis on the genus Centaurea with an emphasis on palynology to be written under his guidance. GW agreed, not knowing that this topic would bring him deeply into plant taxonomy and occupy him for the rest of his life. Further botanical excursions followed, again to Lake Garda and to Montpellier, where GW for the first time experienced the eu-Med-iterranean flora. In November 1954, he passed the final examinations in botany, zoology and chemistry in a room of the Universitätsaula on Gottingen's Wilhelmsplatz and received his doctor's diploma.

Meanwhile, Ruth, who had written her Staatsexamensarbeit on vegetation successions (extract published in 1958 in Wiss. Z. Pädagog. Hochschule Potsdam, Math.-Naturwiss. Reihe 4(1): 55–64), had stayed behind in the Soviet sector of Berlin, though she visited GW a few times in Göttingen. On 30 December 1954 they married in the town-hall of Berlin-Köpenick, but only after a considerable amount of red tape was Ruth permitted to move across the border between the German Democratic Republic and the Federal Republic of Germany to Göttingen in May 1955. Meanwhile, her husband had got a one-term job as scientific assistant to Firbas.

Scholarship in Vienna

A scholarship financed by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) opened new gates to GW in January 1956. He and his wife moved to Vienna for nine months in order to work at the Department of Botany of the Natural History Museum. There, GW was hosted and supervised by Karl Heinz Rechinger, the department's director and a well-known specialist of the flora of the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East with a particular interest in the Compositae. No doubt this interval was very important for GW's further career because, for the first time, he worked in a huge herbarium and a vast library with extensive materials from all over the world. The post-war realities meant, however, among others, that there was no working lift inside the tall and pompous building on Vienna's majestic Ringstraße. During winter, only the botany library was heated, whereas the herbarium remained extremely cold; meanwhile, the second district of the city where the young couple had rented a room still showed all the marks of recent Soviet occupation. In retrospect, Rechinger, no doubt a member of the old taxonomic school more ready to describe one more new species rather than one fewer, noted that each of his suggestions fell on fertile ground with his guest and that GW was instantly able to orientate himself inside the herbarium and the library. In addition, GW managed to quickly and efficiently revise a few plant groups like Psammogeton in the Compositae and Lepyrodiclis in the Umbelliferae for Rechinger's proposed Flora Iranica project. It was at the Natural History Museum in Vienna that GW began to study the Compositae genera Filago, Iflago etc., mimicking balls of wool, and to copy with his typewriter hundreds of protologues of names in the genera Centaurea and Jurinea, which he had traced in the library and which served him in his subsequent studies.

Back in Berlin

With his scholarship coming to an end, GW had to look out for a new position and found it late in 1956 in Berlin, where he became assistant to Erich Werdermann, thereby filling the position previously held by Theo Eckardt. The former was full professor at the FUB and held in personal union the position of director of the BGBM, which was then an independent institution. GW's first job was associated with Werdermann's professorship and as a consequence he was engaged in the Botanisches Großpraktikum. Since the FUB was unable to offer adequate space for academic teaching in botany, the course took place in the famous Blaue Grotte [blue cave] in the Botanical Museum, now the second floor of the Botanical Museum's galleries. When his two-year appointment came to an end, GW remained at the Botanical Museum, albeit in another, newly created position — from 1 October 1958 onward he was wissenschaftlicher Angestellter [scientific employee] at the BGBM. At that time, Hans Melchior was acting director of the institution, and it was clearly for him that GW wrote several treatments, including Campanulales, Dipsacales and Rubiales, for the twelfth edition of the Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien cared for by Melchior and published belatedly in October 1964. Melchior was followed on 1 September 1959 as acting director by Eckardt, who was additionally appointed on 1 October 1959 professor at the FUB without giving up his position as acting director.

In his new position, GW was expected to fulfil curatorial duties and research. He managed to accomplish both commitments in an exemplary way. Judging from the annual reports published in Willdenowia, where the two obligations are for good reason consistently and persistently treated separately, GW's focus was primarily on the rearrangement of the extensive collection of wood samples and of various families in the herbarium, notably the Compositae. As a consequence annotations in his hand, always in black ink, very readable, dated and signed, are omnipresent in the herbarium and continue to act as useful guides to a broad spectrum of specimens even today. During his first years at the BGBM, GW published papers on Centaurea, Myopordon and the life and work of Joseph Bornmüller, thereby starting his series of in-depth studies on the history of botany in general and plant taxonomy in particular. Because of the pronounced historical dimension of taxonomy and nomenclature, GW always regarded this double approach an absolute necessity. It became a characteristic trait of his scientific oeuvre.

After a few years under the acting directors Melchior and Eckardt, the BGBM got a new director on 1 March 1961 in Walter Domke, who had no affiliation with the FUB and whose priorities were different to those of his predecessors. Only a few months later, the world was shocked by the erection of the Berlin wall. On 13 August 1961, not only were the western sectors of Berlin sealed off from the Soviet sector but also from the surrounding areas in the German Democratic Republic. All this went in parallel with the construction of similar fortified structures along the border between the German Democratic Republic and the Federal Republic of Germany. Botanists such as GW based in the western sectors were confronted with several consequences — no more visits to Potsdam, no more excursions into the surroundings of Berlin and no more easy travel to the Federal Republic of Germany. In a sense, the Berlin Wall also changed the profile of the Botanic Garden, which now became a frequently visited green space for those living in the walled-in western sectors. In parallel, the newly appointed director advocated conservation rather than research in plant taxonomy as the primary purpose of his institution and concentrated his attention on the Botanic Garden and the galleries of the Botanical Museum.

Meanwhile, throughout all these changes, GW continued his taxonomic research in the genus Centaurea, and submitted a study on C. subg. Phaeopappus for publication in Botanische Jahrbücher, a journal which at that time had Eckardt as its co-editor. Eckardt invited GW to submit this paper as Habilitationsschrift [habilitation thesis], a proposal to which GW quite naturally agreed. When subsequently informing Domke, his superior, on this plan, GW was lectured that if he chose to continue with his Habilitation [qualification to conduct self-contained university training] at the FUB there would be no further place for him at the BGBM. As a matter of fact this was an inappropriate argument as well as an incorrect statement, because GW's position had meanwhile been made permanent and furthermore no regulation existed that would forbid a Habilitation to a member of staff of the BGBM. However, GW felt deeply offended by Domke and recalled this confrontation a few times in conversation with the first author. Judging from the course catalogue of the FUB, GW started lecturing in the summer term of 1963 and continued offering lectures, practical courses, excursions and seminars for six years. His focus was on plant taxonomy, but he also lectured on flower biology and the history of vegetation in Europe since the Tertiary; a few practical courses in plant determination were also included. It was during these years that GW supervised the first student to write a doctoral thesis under his guidance — Manfred Dittrich, later a curator at the Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève.

After Domke's retirement as director of the BGBM on 30 September 1964, Eckardt was appointed his successor and he brought about a more harmonious working atmosphere at the BGBM. However, it should be noted that the new director expected his scientific staff to spend a maximum of half of their working time on research, while the rest had to go into curatorial activities. These included filing accessions into the herbarium, rearranging collections and identifying specimens cultivated in the garden or gathered on expeditions according to a division of responsibilities. Guided tours for the general public in the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum also belonged to these responsibilities, as did writing brochures on topics dealt with in the Museum's galleries. GW fulfilled all these obligations in a perfect way, and was also made the scientific superintendent of the library, which meant that it was he who selected all acquisitions, determined shelf marks etc. and thereby shaped the profile of this key part of the BGBM. In short, focusing only on research was not commented on favourably by Eckardt, although only occasionally did he sanction the neglect of curatorial duties. Shortly after Eckardt's coming into office, the first instalment of the second edition of volume 6(3) of Hegi Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa started to appear in Munich; it had GW as author. This well-known encyclopaedia dealing with the vascular plants of Central Europe became a leitmotif of his life; three more instalments of volume 6(3) were published during his years in Berlin, a fifth instalment during his early years in Göttingen, while the second edition of volume 6(4) ending the treatment of the Compositae appeared only several years later. While GW was author in these cases, he acted as editor of the third edition of volume 3(1) of this work, published in Berlin in 1981; even before, and together with Dimitri Hartl of Mainz University, GW had been coeditor of the second edition of volume 3(1), which was published in Munich in the years 1965–1974. Otherwise GW refrained from the necessary but invidious and timeconsuming task of editing scientific journals or books.

Based on his Vienna experience, GW became during the sixties an expert in the care and management of herbaria, not only of that in the BGBM but also in other places in Central Europe, e.g. Geneva, where he had worked as a guest for several weeks. His remarkable ability to decipher the handwritings of botanists from all over the world and from several centuries, as well as his qualifications to understand the complexities of herbarium work, originate from this time. GW's paper on the collections in the Willdenow Herbarium originating from the famous expedition undertaken by Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, Andreas Gundelsheimer and Claude Aubriet to the eastern Mediterranean and Transcaucasia in 1700–1701 exemplifies this.

On 2 September 1965, GW, then living at Spanische Allee 160 not very far from the BGBM, was made Kustos [curator] at BGBM, thereby becoming a civil servant of the Land Berlin (the legal successor of the magistrate of Berlin), and on 2 September 1966 the FUB awarded him the title Professor Extraordinary.

In Göttingen again

It was less than three years later, on 1 August 1969, that GW reached the summit of the academic hierarchy in Germany — he was appointed full professor at Göttingen University. This was a sensible and logical move. Considering the taboo on Hausberufungen in Germany, i.e. the concept that the position of a professor must not be a tenure track position within any given university, GW had no chance to be appointed full professor at the FUB and/or a director of the BGBM, irrespective of his qualifications.

The first author had the privilege to meet GW for the first time in Göttingen in September 1973, just four years after GW had taken over the professorship which was combined with the responsibility for the Herbarium. Compared to what the first author had seen previously in Brussels, Edinburgh, Kew, Paris, Prague and Vienna, the Systematisch-Geobotanisches Institut of Göttingen University was definitely a markedly smaller institution. Remarkably, GW was extremely knowledgeable and highly competent in all fields of his new function, including the herbarium and the library. Although now the holder of one of the two chairs of the institute, he continued to cultivate his great interest in all the collections under his care, and he took this — in contrast to some of his equivalents in other universities — very seriously. One of the fruits of this activity was his Index Collectorum Principalium Herbarii Gottingensis published in 1982, now together with subsequent additions and corrections available on the internet. Quite naturally there was more academic teaching in Göttingen than in Berlin, more responsibility, and more administrative duties, with GW twice elected Dean of the faculty and for 1981–1983 vice president of Göttingen University, but there is no doubt that these were happy years for him. For his family and himself he bought a nice house and garden at Gottingen's Ewaldstraße 73, which became also the place for his ever-growing library and where he regularly hosted external visitors. In addition, he felt satisfied with his position with its mix of research, academic teaching, curatorial attention and the routine of managing a small institute, set into the refined atmosphere of an old German university town.

Therefore, it was no surprise that GW chose not to apply for the combined position of professor at the FUB and director of the BGBM, which after the retirement of Eckardt had become vacant, although this decision was regretted by the majority of staff at the BGBM. GW never disclosed his reasons for not applying, but it is likely that he realized wisely that the double function and the running of a much larger institution would perhaps require qualifications he believed he might not possess and that he would be left with much less time to do sensible research. In addition, it should be noted that in the seventies, due to the Berlin Wall, the position was much less attractive than the professorship in Göttingen for any botanist who liked to go with his students on excursions.

During his first decade in Göttingen, GW published several treatments of Compositae genera for Flora of Turkey, notably of the genus Centaurea. Together with Ulrich Hamann of Bochum University, GW published a bibliography of the flora of Central Europe, in a sense a companion volume to Hegi Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, which saw a second edition in 1977. But there was more than treatments for Floras: further papers on the “balls of wool”, i.e. Filago s.l., on the systematics and phytogeny of Compositae in general, on individual herbaria kept in Göttingen such as the “Plantae Malabaricae” and on Göttingen-based botanists such as Albrecht von Haller and August Grisebach. The most substantial contributions during GW's second Göttingen decade were his treatments for Flora Iranica, in particular the accounts of Centaurea and Jurinea, the latter with Rechinger as first author. It was during this period of his life that he was elected full member of the Göttingen Academy of Science, even for a full professor at Göttingen University this was a special honour not awarded automatically.

Over more than three decades, first in Berlin and later in Göttingen, GW supervised a very considerable number of Staatsexamensarbeiten, diploma theses and doctoral theses, plus one habilitation thesis. Topics ranged from carpological studies in the genus Centaurea and related genera to the monocots of the Karakorum Mountains, from the nectar in Asterideae and its relevance for flower biology to nectaries in Dipsacales, from Fragaria species in Lower Saxony to the Luzula campestris group in the northwestern part of Germany. This list could be considerably extended considering that GW mentored, reviewed and assessed no fewer than 36 diploma theses. More relevant for science and very characteristic of his care for his students is another fact: he made sure that a very considerable number of these works or extracts from them were properly published in various scientific journals, among them Botanische Jahrbücher, Candollea, Flora, Stapfia, Willdenowia, or in series like Dissertationes Botanicae. No doubt GW was a man of high standards and he expected these also to be fulfilled by his students. The authors will not forget his final verdict “dünne” [thin, i.e. poor in facts and/or arguments] in cases where GW was not satisfied by the evidence presented or the arguments put forward.

GW's geographical focus was clearly circumscribed, resulting in a somewhat limited knowledge of the plant diversity in the tropics and the southern hemisphere. By contrast, he was a great expert on botanical literature on a global scale, past, present and at great depth. As a consequence, he became a connoisseur of the almost inexhaustible treasures of the Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek (SUB) in Göttingen and became a regular visitor to all its reading rooms. When GW came back to Göttingen in 1969, the SUB compared very favourably with the situation in Berlin. At that time, the similarly inexhaustible treasures of the Preussische Staatsbibliothek were still divided — one part was kept in the Soviet Sector of Berlin, another part in Marburg in the Federal Republic of Germany, a third part in Cracow in Poland, while other parts were either kept in the Soviet Union or had been lost. As a consequence, all this material was much more difficult to use. It is therefore easy to imagine why GW fell in love with the SUB. This resulted in a few high-profile exhibitions, which he initiated and organized in this magnificent library. They focused on the works of Linnaeus, Haller and botanical illustration, yet another topic very near to the heart of GW. Needless to say, he contributed to the respective catalogues.

For a variety of reasons, among them his professorial and administrative duties, and in contrast to some of his colleagues, GW travelled relatively little and, with the exception of tours to Turkey, Armenia and Egypt, only within Europe. In addition, he was not an avid plant collector like Rechinger or Werner Greuter, but like them he also worked in the field and arranged for all his collections to be properly determined and later deposited in his institute's herbarium. Within these limitations, GW had seen much of the European flora — from northern Sweden to Cyprus — with an obvious focus on Central Europe and the Alps, which he visited on excursions often undertaken with students. Unsurprising for a man of his calibre, GW was repeatedly invited to lecture on a broad spectrum of topics and this he did with pleasure, mainly in Germany, but occasionally also in Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands and England. In addition, GW was a regular visitor to the library and herbarium of the BGBM, which he knew so very well, annotating specimens and making photocopies of those books and journals that were not available in Göttingen.

In marked contrast to many of his generation, GW began at an early stage to make use of the potentialities of data management with the help of a computer. He is reported to have possessed the first PC at the institute in Göttingen and was able to impress his students in his competence in handling databases — just moments after having translated a protologue from Latin into German.

In 1993 GW had reached retirement age. While this often means a decrease of scientific output, this was definitely not the case with him and the opposite happened, although with a gradual shift towards history of botany versus taxonomy. His most important publication from this period was the Wörterbuch der Botanik [Dictionary of Botany], the fruit of some forty years of study. Meanwhile, it has become a standard reference for botanical terminology highly praised by the scientific community and available in a second, enlarged edition, which was also taken care of by GW. As explicitly stated in the subtitle “Die Termini in ihrem historischen Zusammenhang” [The terms in their historical context], this dictionary is at the same time a major contribution to the history of biology in general. The thoroughness of GW's approach may be illustrated by a simple figure - no fewer than 109 printed pages are dedicated to the bibliography containing several thousand references going back to the year 1542. Short biographies of a considerable number of biologists followed from GW's pen for several projects, like the Lexikon der bedeutenden Naturwissenschaftler. On the other hand, he continued to publish on Cardueae and wrote the account of Globulariaceae for The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants as well as papers on technical terms. His analysis of the German term “ansalben”, often used in the floristic literature, may act to exemplify the breadth of his knowledge — he could prove that it goes back to a fine in Alessandro Manzoni's novel I Promessi Sposi first published in Milan in 1840—1842. Several nomenclatural proposals co-authored by GW also appeared during this period of his life — earlier, i.e. in the period following the XI International Botanical Congress in Seattle in 1969, he had been a member of one of the permanent nomenclature committees, the Committee for Spermatophyta, and subsequently kept an interest in the evolution of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (which became, in 2011, the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants).

In agreement with German tradition, GW maintained a room at his institute, by then renamed Albrecht-von-Haller-Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften, and came in almost daily. Later, GW was unfortunately moved to a much smaller room in the basement, where he received guests and where some of his books and journals found shelter. He continued to enjoy the Old Botanic Garden (Fig. 1), and he continued to collect the biographical data on various botanists, write book reviews and act as a reviewer for projects or manuscripts to be published. The Göttingen Academy and the meetings held there, which he had regularly attended over the years, became more important to him now than ever before, including the famous Nachsitzungen [suppers after a meeting] at the seat of the academy at Theatergasse 7 along with the informal gatherings of his colleagues there. And GW continued to enjoy the pros of his life as an emeritus in Göttingen — its dense network of book shops, concerts, SUB and its perfect bibliographical service as well as the exhibitions held there and, not to be forgotten, the delicious sweets of Cron & Lanz, another Göttingen institution, where the authors met GW on a few occasions.

The final years

Losing his beloved wife Ruth first to dementia and then to death on 31 July 2007 must have been an extremely bitter experience for GW, but he still had the strength and energy to continue. He published a revision of the genus Centaurea in Iraq, a brief introduction to botanical illustration, and contributed to a substantial paper on the history of research in Compositae. Always interested in the botanical exploration of his home region, i.e. the Land Brandenburg, in its historical dimension, GW summarized his many years of biographical and bibliographical research on this topic in a paper of 499 pages that appeared in Verhandlungen des Botanischen Vereins für Berlin und Brandenburg in 2010. It was during his final years that GW focused his attention on the many letters written by Carl Ludwig Willdenow, the Prussian Linnaeus, which are still extant in various archives, notably in Scandinavia. He transcribed them, summarized their content and provided, together with the first author, an introduction, biographical account, commentary and index, all published in Annals for the History and Philosophy of Sciences on no fewer than 291 pages. Willdenow was also the subject of GW's last lecture given outside Göttingen — at a meeting of the Botanischer Verein für Berlin und Brandenburg (BVBB) in Berlin. As always, he spoke in his clear Potsdam intonation, free of any influence taken up during his many years in Lower Saxony.

GW was very happy with the families of his three sons, including his ten grandchildren, and saw them regularly, in Göttingen and elsewhere. He was also lucky in enjoying stable health for very many years. Late in life GW developed a lymphoma which progressed slowly, but in its later stages made chemotherapy necessary. He coped with the first course admirably and in the long subsequent pause led an almost normal life. In his eighty-eighth year he performed a vivid and lively lecture on Willdenow and his letters at the Göttingen Academy. However, GW felt substantially weakened by the second course of chemotherapy, though he remained self-determined, in physical and intellectual integrity, active, interested in the world around him and even spoke on the telephone to both authors as late as early January 2017. In order to be nearer to his eldest son, GW was transferred from Göttingen to Geisenheim. His mind having been crystal clear until the end, his body finally succumbed to pneumonia on 30 January 2017 in the St. Josef Spital in Rüdesheim am Rhein. On 10 February 2017 his sons and their families, friends, pupils, colleagues, the current holder of GW's chair, as well as representatives from Göttingen University and Göttingen Academy gathered at the Junkerberg cemetery in Göttingen to accompany Gerhard's coffin and say farewell to him.

In several respects GW was an extraordinary man. As a plant taxonomist, he possessed special qualifications, a fact very appropriately expressed by Rechinger who wrote in his eulogy published in the Wagenitz Festschrift of 1987: “Rarely do we find united in a single individual to such a high degree the intellectual and personal characteristics indispensable for this branch of study, like the capacity for critical observation, feeling for forms, the ability to remember forms, the capacity for concentration and abstraction, patience, consistency, and last but not least also the capacity to express oneself in writing and orally in a clear and concise manner”. However, there was much more to GW than just a plant taxonomist. Karen Nickelsen, then a student of the history of science and art at Göttingen University and now a professor at Munich University, who had met him in the nineties, called GW in retrospect “an incredibly knowledgeable, very approachable, vivid professor and scientist, always in a good mood and full of humour” with an enthusiasm which was “not only authentic but contagious”. She characterized him as “very generous with his time, his advice, ready to share ideas” and noted that GW knew “the delicate art to enrich in content, to guide occasionally, but let sufficient space for diverging views, to mark his own limits, beyond which the opinions of others should be looked for”. Indeed a very appropriate statement. As a lecturer, GW spoke insistently and knew well how to limit himself to the key points of the argument. Very rightly Rechinger had noted already that “far-flung theories and speculations are strange to him [GW] just like nice phrases and the use of buzzwords”, it was his “unerring objectiveness” which for decades had brought GW according to Rechinger the “unlimited appreciation” in the circles of the initiated. At the same time GW possessed a profound knowledge of the complex way in which knowledge in botany developed — not just over the last years but over the last four centuries. For him botany was more than knowledge about plants, but included also all facts on how, when and by whom this knowledge had been collected. This made him one of the few experts in this field; although several of his pertinent publications have Göttingen as their geographical focus, his approach was always much broader. In short, GW's fame resulted almost exclusively from his publications and his oral presentations — not from funds raised, not from organizations founded or chaired, not from congresses organized, not from publicity gained in the media.

As a scientist GW was honoured by having being elected corresponding member of the Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft, honorary member of the Deutsche Botanische Gesellschaft, of the BVBB and the Moskovskoe obščestvo ispytatelij prirody. In 1979 he was chosen as recipient of the Willdenow Medal of the BGBM. For a list of eponyms see Wissemann & Lack (2016).

In agreement with his will, GW's estate went to his sons. His scientific correspondence, diaries, manuscripts, drawings and a small number of exceptional and rare books were bequeathed to the SUB, where he had spent so many happy hours chasing rare items and reading. Based on GW's testament, Jürgen, Karsten and Uwe Wagenitz decided to donate almost the entire remaining part of GW's botanical library to the BGBM, where it has meanwhile been received. The Göttingen Academy has agreed to permanently host the electronic files of GW's extensive collection of biographies, almost exclusively of botanists, a project still in progress.

Epilogue

GW was clearly one of those increasingly rare individuals who possessed an extremely broad spectrum of interests, knowledge and qualifications. In addition, he possessed a distinct and high profile, basing his judgements largely on experience and competence, not on empty words. GW was remarkably well read, with a focus on German literature; the first author will not forget, for example, how they laughed together about the lack of a Göttingen audience's response to “bras dessus, bras dessous” in Hugo von Hoffmannsthal's comedy Der Schwierige. In an exemplary way, GW was at the same time a man of culture and intellect, wisdom and humour, always tactful and polite, with an encyclopaedic knowledge ready to share it with all who were genuinely interested. His soberness and a certain undemanding nature may have been a reflection of his meagre post-war years. In a sense it was very appropriate therefore that GW's sons selected for the death notice a rather technical pen-and-ink drawing of a flowering-head of Centaurea triumfettii, originally drawn by his long-time scientific assistant Ursula Hofmann (†), from GW's book plate as decoration together with an excerpt from Rainer Maria Rilke's immortal lines Herbst, here quoted in translation (Fall) by Guntram Deichsel:

“The leaves are falling, falling as from far […] We all are falling. This hand falls, as it extends. And take a look at others. It's in them all. And yet there's One, holding this fall With endless gentleness in both his hands.”

Note

This obituary is based on (1) miscellaneous recollections for the years c. 1931–1964 noted down by GW, which remain unpublished and have been deposited in the manuscript collection of the SUB with copies in the archive of the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin; (2) his autobiographical paper “Erinnerungen an die Botanik in Berlin nach 1945 und an Theo Eckardt” (see bibliography); and (3) conversations held with the first author over a period of 33 years and the second author over a period of 22 years. In addition, the annual reports of the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem, published in Willdenowia, have been found very helpful. For other sources see Bioprofile.

All translations from German are by the authors.

Acknowledgements

Thanks are due to P. Hiepko (Potsdam) and K. Nickelsen (Munich) for sharing their recollections of GW with us. A preliminary version of this text was read by J. Compton (Tilbury), N. Kilian, E. Lack and R. Vogt (all Berlin).

Bioprofile

1.

Rechinger K. H. 1987: Gerhard Wagenitz zum sechzigsten Geburtstag. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 108: 143–153. Google Scholar

2.

Wissemann V. & Lack H. W. 2017: “In communal joy towards all that is alive” — Gerhard Wagenitz (1927-2017).— Taxon 66: 1003–1007. Google Scholar

3.

Wissemann V. & Lack H. W. 2018: “In der gemeinsamen Freude an allem Lebendigem” — Gerhard Wagenitz (1927–2017). — Jahrb. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen 2017: in press. Google Scholar

Publications of Gerhard Wagenitz

4.

1953: Über die Zuverlässigkeit des Nachweises der Kornblume (Centaurea cyanus L.) in der Späteiszeit. — Naturwissenschaften 40: 249. Google Scholar

5.

1955: Pollenmorphologie und Systematik in der Gattung Centaurea L. s.l. — Flora 142: 213–279. Google Scholar

6.

1955: Über die Änderung der Pollengröße von Getreiden durch verschiedene Emährungsbedingungen. — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 68: 297–302. Google Scholar

7.

1956: Die Formen des Arzneibaldrians in Mitteldeutschland. — Hess. Florist. Briefe 5(51): 2–3. Google Scholar

8.

1956: Die Gattung Psammogeton Edgew. (Umbelliferae). — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 69: 227–238. Google Scholar

9.

1956: Pollenmorphologie der mitteleuropäischen Valerianaceen. — Flora 143: 473–485. Google Scholar

10.

1957: Zur Gattung Lepyrodiclis Fenzl (Caryophyllaceae). — Ann. Naturhist. Mus. Wien 61: 74–77. Google Scholar

11.

1957: Zur Bestimmung der Kleinarten des Arzneibaldrians (Valeriana officinalis L. s.l.). — Wiss. Z. Univ. Halle, Math.-Nat. Reihe 6: 927–928. Google Scholar

12.

1958: Die Gattung Myopordon Boiss. (Composita—Cynareae). — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 71: 211–211. Google Scholar

13.

1959: Neue und bemerkenswerte Chenopodiaceen Inneranatoliens. — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 72: 151–158. Google Scholar

14.

1959: Die systematische Stellung der Rubiaceae. Ein Beitrag zum System der Sympetalen. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 79: 17–35. Google Scholar

15.

1960: Bestimmungsschlüssel für die Gattungen der Compositae. — Pp. 687–695 in: Encke, F. (ed.), Pareys Blumengärtnerei 2. — Berlin: P. Parey. Google Scholar

16.

1960: Joseph Bornmüller, 1862–1948. — Willdenowia 2: 343–360. Google Scholar

17.

1960: Centaurea sieheana spec. nov. aus dem Taurus — Gebirge. — Willdenowia 2: 410–416. Google Scholar

18.

1960: Über einige Arten der Gattung Centaurea aus der Türkei. — Willdenowia 2: 456–468. Google Scholar

19.

1960: Centaurea L. sect. Cynaropsis, eine neue Sektion der Gattung aus Vorderasien. — Willdenowia 2: 469–494. Google Scholar

20.

1962: Die Gattung Oligochaeta (DC.) C. Koch (Compositae—Cynareae). — Veröff. Geobot. Inst. ETH, Stift. Rübel 37: 315–329. Google Scholar

21.

1962: Compositae: Centaurea. — Årbok Univ. Bergen, Mat. -Nat. Ser. 1962, No. 1: 52–55. Google Scholar

22.

1963: [“1962”] Pflanzen von der Orientreise Tourneforts im Herbar Willdenow in Berlin. — Willdenowia 3: 109–136. Google Scholar

23.

1963: [“1962”]: Zur Kenntnis der Flora und Vegetation Anatoliens (Ergebnisse einer Reise im Herbst 1957). — Willdenowia 3: 221–288. Google Scholar

24.

1963: Die Eingliederung der “Phaeopappus”-Arten in das System von Centaurea. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 82: 137–215. Google Scholar

25.

1963: Nutzhölzer. — Berlin: Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem. Google Scholar

26.

1963: Verwendung des Holzes. — Berlin: Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem. Google Scholar

27.

1964: Thymelaeales, Ebenales, Oleales, Gentianales, Dipsacales, Campanulales. — Pp. 316–322, 396–424, 472–497 in: Melchior H. (ed.), A. Englers Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien, ed. 12, 2. — Berlin-Nikolassee: Borntraeger. Google Scholar

28.

1964: Compositae. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6 (3): 1–80. — München: C. Hanser. Google Scholar

29.

1964: [“1963”] Taxonomie und Evolutionsforschung im Bereich höherer Kategorien. — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 76: (91)–(97). Google Scholar

30.

1964: Zur Nomenklatur zweier europäischer Arten der Gattung Aster L. (“Aster trinervis Desf.” und “A. cinereus Korsh.”). — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 83: 327–329. Google Scholar

31.

1965: (Buchheim G. & —): Proposal to conserve the generic name Filago L. — Regnum Veg. 34: 61–62. Google Scholar

32.

1965: Zur Systematik und Nomenklatur einiger Arten von Filago L. emend. Gaertn. sect. Filago (“Filago germanica” — Gruppe). — Willdenowia 4: 37–59. Google Scholar

33.

1965: Compositae. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6 (3): 81–160. — München: C. Hanser. Google Scholar

34.

1966: Die Sektion Evacopsis der Gattung Filago (Compositae—Inuleae) im westlichen Mittelmeergebiet. — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 79: 336–342. Google Scholar

35.

1966: Compositae. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6 (3): 161–240. — München: C. Hanser. Google Scholar

36.

1967: Betrachtungen über die Artenzahlen der Pflanzen und Tiere. — Sitzungsber. Ges. Naturf. Freunde Berlin N. F. 7: 79–93. Google Scholar

37.

1968: Filago desertorum Pomel und F. hurdwarica (DC.) Wagenitz, zwei verkannte Arten der “Filago germanica” — Gruppe aus Nordafrika, Vorder- und Zentralasien. — Willdenowia 4: 283–298. Google Scholar

38.

1968: Weitere Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Gattung Filago (CompositaeInuleae). — Willdenowia 5: 55–66. Google Scholar

39.

1968: Compositae. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6 (3): 241–320. — München: C. Hanser. Google Scholar

40.

1969: Abgrenzung und Gliederung der Gattung Filago L. s.l. (Compositae—Inuleae). — Willdenowia 5: 395–444. Google Scholar

41.

1970: Über die Verbreitung einiger Filago-Arten. — Feddes Repert. 81: 107–117. Google Scholar

42.

1970: A key to the species of Filago L. s.l. (Compositae) in Palestine with notes on the distribution. — Israel J. Bot. 19: 260–265. Google Scholar

43.

1970: Die Gattung Filago L. s.l. (CompositaeInuleae) in der Ägäis. — Willdenowia 6: 115–137. Google Scholar

44.

1970: (Hamann, U. & —): Bibliographie zur Flora von Mitteleuropa. — München: C. Hanser. Google Scholar

45.

1971: Die Gattung Filago (Filzkraut) in Niedersachsen. — Göttinger Florist. Rundbr. 5: 3–5. Google Scholar

46.

1971: Centaurea pseudocadmea, eine neue Art der Sektion Phalolepis aus Griechenland. — Ann. Naturhist. Mus. Wien 75: 243–247. Google Scholar

47.

1971: Zur taxonomischen Stellung und Nomenklatur von Micropus longifolius (Compositae—Inuleae). — Österr. Bot. Z. 119: 399–403. Google Scholar

48.

1972: Das Herrenhäuser Herbar in Göttingen. — Taxon 21: 287–289. Google Scholar

49.

1972: Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Gattung Centaurea L. 1. Zur Taxonomie türkischer Arten der Sektionen Acrolophus und Acrocentron. — Willdenowia 6: 479–508. Google Scholar

50.

1972: Grisebach, August Heinrich Rudolf. — Pp. 546–547 in: Gillispie C. C. (ed.), Dictionary of Scientific Biography 5. — New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Google Scholar

51.

1973: Zur Flora von Baitrum. — Göttinger Florist. Rundbr. 7: 3–9. Google Scholar

52.

1974: Parallele Evolution von Merkmalen in der Gattung Centaurea. — Phyton 16: 301–312. Google Scholar

53.

1974: Centaurea (Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Gattung Centaurea L. 2.) — Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 33: 217–231. Google Scholar

54.

1975: Blütenreduktion als ein zentrales Problem der Angiospermen-Systematik. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 96: 448–470. Google Scholar

55.

1975: Floristic connections between the Balkan peninsula and the Near East as exemplified by the genus Centaurea. — Pp. 223–228 in: Problems of Balkan Flora and Vegetation. — Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. Google Scholar

56.

1975: Amberboa, Mantisalca, Oligochaeta, Centaurea. — Pp. 461–462, 464–585 in: Davis P. H. (ed.), Flora of Turkey and the West Aegean Islands 5. — Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Google Scholar

57.

1976: Systematics and phylogeny of the Compositae (Asteraceae). — P1. Syst. Evol. 125: 29–46. Google Scholar

58.

1976: Was ist eine Achäne? Zur Geschichte eines karpologischen Begriffs. — Candollea 31: 79–85. Google Scholar

59.

1976: Two species of the “Filago germanica” group (Compositae—Inuleae) in the United States. — Sida 6: 221–223. Google Scholar

60.

1976: Xanthium, Ambrosia, Erigeron, Conyza, Filago, Antennaria. — Pp. 534–535, 537–539, 549–550 in: Rothmaler W. (ed.) (fortgeführt von R. Schubert & W. Vent), Exkursionsflora für die Gebiete der DDR und der BRD 4. Kritischer Band [ed. 4]. — Berlin: Volk und Wissen. Google Scholar

61.

1977: Zur Bestimmung der Leucanthemum-Arten in Mitteleuropa nördlich der Alpen. — Göttinger Florist. Rundbr. 10: 80–85. Google Scholar

62.

1977: Geordnete Mannigfaltigkeit — die Systematische Abteilung. — Pp. 31–38 in: Schultze-Motel W., Zehn Spaziergänge im Botanischen Garten Berlin — Dahlem. — Berlin: Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum Berlin-Dahlem. Google Scholar

63.

1977: New aspects of the systematics of Asteridae. —- P1. Syst. Evol. Suppl. 1: 375–395. Google Scholar

64.

1977: J. C. P. Arckenhausen. Illustrator botanischer Werke. — Pp. 23–27 in: Griep H.-G., Ullrich H. & — (ed.): Johann Christian Peter Arckenhausen. 1784–1855. — Goslar: Museumsverein Goslar (= Ullrich H. (ed.), Goslarer Künstler und Kunsthandwerker 1). Google Scholar

65.

1977: Hallers Bedeutung für die Botanik im Zeitalter Linnés. — Pp. 26–31 in: Albrecht von Haller. Zum 200. Todestag. — Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. Google Scholar

66.

1977: Haller als Botaniker. — Pp. 23–29 in: Ausstellung Albrecht von Haller, 1708–1777. Im Foyer der Bibliothek, 12.12.1977—7.1.1978. — Göttingen (= Arbeiten Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek 14a). Google Scholar

67.

1977: (Hamann U. & —): Bibliographie zur Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2. — Berlin: P. Parey. Google Scholar

68.

1978: Einleitung. — Pp. 1–5 in: Carl von Linné. Ausstellung. — s.l. (= Kleine Ausstellungsführer der Niedersächsischen Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek 4). Google Scholar

69.

1978: The “Plantae Malabaricae” of the herbarium at Göttingen collected near Tranquebar. — Taxon 27: 493–494. Google Scholar

70.

1979: (Rechinger K. H. & —): Jurinea. — Pp. 180–209, tt. 177–203 in: Rechinger K. H. (ed.), Flora Iranica 139a. — Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt. Google Scholar

71.

1979: Compositae. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6 (3): 321–366, i-xliv. — Berlin: P. Parey. Google Scholar

72.

1980: Micropus, Bombycilaena, Chamaepus, Cymbolaena, Filago, Ifloga. — Pp. 10–28, tt. 121–128 in: Rechinger K. H. (ed.), Flora Iranica 145. — Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt. Google Scholar

73.

(Jeffrey C., Lack H. W., Gamal-Eldin E. & —): Proposal to reject Pulicaria undulata (L.) C. A. Meyer under the terms of Article 69. — Taxon 29: 694–695. Google Scholar

74.

(Jeffrey C., Lack H. W., Gamal-Eldin E. & —): Callicephalus, Centaurea, Hymenocephalus, Schischkinia, Oligochaeta. — Pp. 312–421, 426–428, 443–447, tt. 299–384, 388, 399–401, 408–424 in: Rechinger K. H. (ed.), Flora Iranica 139b. — Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt. Google Scholar

75.

(Jeffrey C., Lack H. W., Gamal-Eldin E. & —): Leben und Wirken des Pflanzengeographen A. Grisebach (1814–1879). — Georgia Augusta 32: 5–14. Google Scholar

76.

1981: (— & Meyer G.): Die Unkrautflora der Kalkäcker bei Göttingen und im Meißnervorland und ihre Veränderung. — Tuexenia 1: 7–23. Google Scholar

77.

1981: in Brief Alexander von Humboldts an den Pflanzengeographen August Grisebach. — Ruperto Carola 65/66: 147–151. Google Scholar

78.

1981: Orchideen und Compositen, Vergleich zweier Familien und Evolutionsstrategien. — Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 94: 229–247. Google Scholar

79.

1981: Centaurea melanocephala Pančič (Compositae), eine endemische Art Serbiens — kein Sektionsbastard. — Phyton 21: 289–294. Google Scholar

80.

1981: Drei neue Arten der Gattung Centaurea (Compositae Cardueae) aus der Flora von Libanon und Syrien. — Candollea 36: 365–373. Google Scholar

81.

1982: (—, Dittrich M. & Damboldt J.): Centaurothamnus, eine neue Gattung der Compositae Cardueae aus Arabien. — Candollea 37: 101–115. Google Scholar

82.

1982: Index Collectorum Principalium Herbarii Gottingensis. — Göttingen. Google Scholar

83.

1982: Xanthium, Ambrosia, Erigeron, Conyza, Filago, Antennaria. — Pp. 534–535, 537–539, 549–550 in: Schubert R. & Vent W. (ed.) (Begründet von W. Rothmaler), Exkursionsflora für die Gebiete der DDR und der BRD 4. Kritischer Band [ed. 5]. — Berlin: Volk und Wissen. — Note: Unchanged re-editions appeared in 1986 [ed. 6] and 1988 [ed. 7]. Google Scholar

84.

1982: Das Bild der Pflanze in botanischen Werken. Ausstellung im Foyer der Bibliothek anläßlich des 150jährigen Bestehens des Göttinger Universitätsherbars. — s.l. (= Kleine Ausstellungsführer. Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek 9). Google Scholar

85.

1983: Die Gattung Adenostyles Cass. (Compositae-Senecioneae). — Phyton 23: 141–159. Google Scholar

86.

1983: Centaurea and the Index Kewensis. — Taxon 32: 107–109. Google Scholar

87.

1983: (— & Esfandiari E.): Zwei neue Arten der Gattung Centaure a (Compositae) aus dem Iran. — Willdenowia 13: 137–140. Google Scholar

88.

1983: (— & Gamal-Eldin E.): Die Gattung Sclerostephane Chiov. (Compositae, Inuleae). — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 104: 91–113. Google Scholar

89.

1983: Die einjährigen Centaure a-Arten der Sektion Cyanus DC. — Tuexenia 3: 535–544. Google Scholar

90.

1983: (Gamal-Eldin E. & —): Eine neue Centaurea-Art der Sektion Phalolepis (Compositae) aus Nordgriechenland (Chalkidike). — Willdenowia 13: 323–327. Google Scholar

91.

1984: (— & Laing B.): Die Nektarien der Dipsacales und ihre systematische Bedeutung. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 104: 483–507. Google Scholar

92.

1984: Filago. — Pp. 389–393 in: Monterde P. (ed.), Nouvelle Flore du Liban et de la Syrie (publ. par A. Charpin & M. Dittrich) 3. — Beyrouth: Dar el-Machreq. Google Scholar

93.

1984: Centaurea [Überarbeitung]. — Pp. 469–495 in: Monterde P. (ed.), Nouvelle Flore du Liban et de la Syrie (publ. par A. Charpin & M. Dittrich) 3. — Beyrouth: Dar el-Machreq. Google Scholar

94.

1984: Centaurea in the Arabian peninsula. — Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 41: 457–466. Google Scholar

95.

1985: Historische Aspekte der botanischen Terminologie. — Jahrb. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen 1984: 95–96. Google Scholar

96.

1985: A new species of Centaurea (Compositae) from Iraq. — Kew Bull. 40: 793–794. Google Scholar

97.

1985: Geordnete Mannigfaltigkeit — die Systematische Abteilung. — Pp. 33–40 in: Schultze-Motel W., Zehn Spaziergänge im Botanischen Garten Berlin — Dahlem, ed. 3. — Berlin: Fördererkreis der naturwissenschaftlichen Museen Berlins. Google Scholar

98.

1985: (— & Gamal-Eldin E.): Zur Kenntnis der griechischen Centaurea-Arten der Sektion Acrocentron. — Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 107: 95–127. Google Scholar

99.

1986: Centaurea in South-West Asia: patterns of distribution and diversity. — Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh 89B: 11–21. Google Scholar

100.

1987: Compositae II: Matricaria Hieracium. — In: Hegi, Illustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa, ed. 2, 6(4). — Berlin: P. Parey. Google Scholar

101.

1987: Die Entwicklung der Biologie an der Universität Göttingen. — Georgia Augusta 47: 29–35. Google Scholar

102.

1988: Göttinger Biologen 1737–1945. Eine biographisch-bibliographische Liste. — Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (= Göttinger Universitätsschriften, Ser. C, 2). Google Scholar

103.

1988: 250 Jahre Göttinger Biologen im Beruf. — Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Informationen 1988 (1): 6–8. Google Scholar

104.

1989: Nahe Verwandtschaft zwischen Arten der Centaurea-Sektionen Acrolophus und Phalolepis. — Flora 182: 341–351. Google Scholar

105.

1989: (— & Bedarff U.): Taxonomic notes on some species of the genus Cichorium (Compositae-Lactuceae). — Pp. 11–21 in: Tan K. (ed.), Plant taxonomy, phytogeography and related subjects. The Davis & Hedge Festschrift. — Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Google Scholar

106.

1989: The genus Volutaria Cass. in Europe. — Comp. Newsletter 17: 7–9. Google Scholar

107.

1990: Xanthium, Ambrosia, Erigeron, Conyza, Filago, Antennaria. — Pp. 534–535, 537–539, 549–550 in: Schubert R. & Vent W. (ed.) (begründet von W. Rothmaler), Exkursionsflora von Deutschland 4. Kritischer Band [ed. 8]. — Berlin: Volk und Wissen. Google Scholar

108.

1991: New taxa and new names in the genus Volutaria Cass. (Compositae). — Candollea 46: 407–410. Google Scholar

109.

1992: The Asteridae: evolution of a concept and its present status. — Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 79: 209–217. Google Scholar

110.

1993: (— & Eck R.): Hallers botanische Harzreise im Jahre 1738. — Diss. Bot. 196: 27–40. Google Scholar

111.

1993: Sprengels “Entdecktes Geheimniss der Natur im Bau und in der Befruchtung der Blumen” aus dem Jahre 1793 und seine Wirkung. — Nachr. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen II. Math.-Physik. Kl. 1993: 1–11. Google Scholar

112.

1993: Das Herbar des Systematisch-Geobotanischen Instituts der Universität Göttingen - Archiv und Forschungsstätte. — Georgia Augusta 59: 43–53. Google Scholar

113.

1994: Die Entwicklung der Biologie an der Universität Göttingen. — Pp. 205–215 in: Schlotter H.-G. (ed.), Die Geschichte der Verfassung und der Fachbereiche der Georg-August-Universität. — Göttingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht (= Göttinger Universitätsschriften, Ser. A, 16). Google Scholar

114.

1994: (Hellwig F., Oberprieler Ch., Vogt R. & - ): Chromosome numbers of North African phanerogams. III. Some counts in Centaurea (Compositae, Cardueae). — Willdenowia 24: 249–254. Google Scholar

115.

1994: Georg Forsters botanische Sammlungen und ihre Auswertung. — Pp. 179–190 in: Klenke C.-V. (ed.), Georg Forster in interdisziplinärer Perspektive. Beiträge des Internationalen Georg Forster-Symposions in Kassel, 1. bis 4. April 1993. — Berlin: Akademie-Verlag. Google Scholar

116.

1995: [“1994”] Georg Forster. Naturforscher. Rede anläßlich der Anbringung einer Gedenktafel am 25. November 1994, Papendieck 16. — Göttinger Jahrb 42: 202–204.. (erneut abgedruckt in Georg-Forster-Studien 1: 171–175. — Berlin 1997). Google Scholar

117.

1995: Proposal to reject the name Cacalia L. (Compositae: Senecioneae). — Taxon 44: 445–446. Google Scholar

118.

1996: Geobotanik in Göttingen: Von Albrecht von Haller bis Franz Firbas. — Verb. Ges. Ökol. 25: 9–16. Google Scholar

119.

1996: (— & Hellwig F. H.): Evolution of characters and phylogeny of the Centaureinae. — Pp. 491–510 in: Hind D. J. N. & Beentje H. J. (ed.), Compositae: Systematics. Proceedings of the International Compositae Conference, Kew, 1994 1. — Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens. Google Scholar

120.

1996: Von der Gestalt zum Molekül - der Weg der Systematik? — Schriften Genet. Ressourcen 4: 88–97. Google Scholar

121.

1996: Wörterbuch der Botanik. Morphologie, Anatomie, Taxonomie, Evolution. Die Termini in ihrem historischen Zusammenhang. — Jena: G. Fischer. Google Scholar

122.

1997: (— & Hellwig F. H.): Eine neue und eine verschollene Centaurea-Art aus der Türkei und eine neue Volutaria-Art (Compositae-Cardueae). — Ann. Naturhist. Mus. Wien 98 B Suppl.: 175–181. Google Scholar

123.

1997: Centaurea und die Entwicklung der Systematik. — Haussknechtia, Beih. 7: 31–32. Google Scholar

124.

1997: Die „Scala naturae“ in der Naturgeschichte des 18. Jahrhunderts und ihre Kritiker. — Jahrb. Gesch. Theorie Biol. 4: 179–195. Google Scholar

125.

1997: The impact of molecular methods on the systematics of angiosperms. — Bot. Acta 110: 274–281. Google Scholar

126.

1997: 33 Jahre im Dienste der Göttinger Botanischen Gärten. [W. Richter]. — Gärtner.-Bot. Brief 128: 23–24. Google Scholar

127.

1998: Botanik (Historia naturalis botanica), Zoologie, Anthropologie und nichtklinische Medizin (Zoologie). — Pp. 239–245 in: Raabe P. (ed.), Handbuch der historischen Buchbestände in Deutschland 2, 1. — Hildesheim: Olms-Weidmann. Google Scholar

128.

1998: Fachsprache und Textarten in der Biologie. — Pp. 135–144 in: Bergmann R. (ed.), Probleme der Textauswahl für einen elektronischen Thesaurus. — Stuttgart: S. Hirzel. Google Scholar

129.

1998: (-, Ertugrul K. & Dural H.): A new species of Centaurea sect. Psephelloideae (Compositae) from SW Turkey. — Willdenowia 28: 157–161. Google Scholar

130.

1998: (Sukopp H. & -): Prof. Dr. Hildemar Scholz - 70 Jahre. — Verb. Bot. Vereins Berlin Brandenburg 131: 243–257. Google Scholar

131.

1999: (Akhani H. & -): Centaurea golestanica Akhani & Wagenitz, sp. nov. — Edinburgh J. Bot. 56: 6–10. Google Scholar

132.

1999: Botanical terminology and homology in their historical context. — Syst. Geogr. P1. 68: 33–37. Google Scholar

133.

1999: Goethe und die Botanik.— Pp. 169–179 in: Mittler E., Purpus E. & Schwedt G. (ed.): „Der gute Kopf leuchtet überall hervor“. Goethe, Göttingen und die Wissenschaft. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

134.

2000: (— & Schäfer M.): Heinz Ellenberg, 1. August 1913-2. Mai 1997. — Jahrb. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen 1998: 239–246. Google Scholar

135.

2000: Bibliography of biographical literature on Johann Hedwig (1730–1799). — Nova Hedwigia 70: 61–64. Google Scholar

136.

2000: Erinnerungen an die Botanik in Berlin nach 1945 und an Theo Eckardt. — Pp. 49–59 in: Kössler F. & Höxtermann E. (ed.), Zur Geschichte der Botanik in Berlin und Potsdam. Wandel und Neubeginn nach 1945. — Berlin: Verlag für Wissenschafts- und Regionalgeschichte Dr. M. Engel. Google Scholar

137.

2000: (— & Hellwig F.) The genus Psephellus Cass. (Compositae, Cardueae) revisited with a broadened concept. — Willdenowia 30: 29–44. Google Scholar

138.

2001: [“2000”] Wilhelm Daniel Joseph Koch (1771–1849), ein Altmeister der Floristik. — Hoppea 61: 833–852. Google Scholar

139.

2001: Über das Wort „Ansalben“. — Florist. Rundbr. 34: 25–27. Google Scholar

140.

2001: Das Herbar des Albrecht-von-Haller-Instituts für Pflanzenwissenschaften — Archiv und Forschungsstätte. — Pp. 235–242 in: Hoffmann D. & Maak-Rheinländer K. (ed.) „Ganz für das Studium angelegt“: Die Museen, Sammlungen und Gärten der Universität Göttingen. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

141.

2001: Wilhelm Hofmeister (1824–1877). — Pp. 332–344, 526–527 in: Jahn I. & Schmitt M. (ed.): Darwin & Co. Eine Geschichte der Biologie in Portraits 1. — München: Beck. Google Scholar

142.

2001: Von der scientia amabilis zur wissenschaftlichen Botanik und zur molekularen Biologie — Bezeichnungen als Lobspruch und Abgrenzung. — Verh. Gesch. Theorie Biol. 7: 335–342. Google Scholar

143.

2001: Friedrich Gottlieb Bartling, Gottfried Berthold, Christian Wilhelm Büttner, Heinz Ellenberg, Franz Firbas, August Grisebach, Richard Harder, Georg Franz Hoffmann, Albert Peter, Johannes Reinke, Heinrich Adolph Schrader, Hermann Graf zu Solms-Laubach, Fritz von Wettstein. — Pp. 152–153, 252–253, 34–35, 684–685, 538–539, 164–165, 446–447, 70–71, 254–255, 240–241, 78–79, 226–227, 414–415 in: Arndt K., Gottschalk G. & Smend R. (ed.), Göttinger Gelehrte. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

144.

2001: Anfänge der Botanik an der Georgia Augusta im Spannungsfeld zwischen Haller und Linné. — Nachr. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen, II. Math. — Phys. K1. 2001: 23–43. Google Scholar

145.

2001: [“2002”]: Xanthium, Ambrosia, Erigeron, Conyza, Leucanthemum, Filago, Centaurea. — Pp. 649–650, 654–656, 662–663, 667–669, 680–684 in: Jäger E. J. & Werner K. (ed.): Exkursionsflora von Deutschland 4. Gefäßpflanzen: Kritischer Band. Begründet von W. Rothmaler, ed. 9. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

146.

2001: (Greuter W., —, Agababian M. & Hellwig F. H.): Proposal to conserve the name Centaurea (Compositae) with a conserved type. — Taxon 50: 1201–1205. Google Scholar

147.

2002: [“2001”] Hans Steffen (1882–1945) — ein ostpreußischer Botaniker. — Schriftenreihe Deutsch. Rat Landespflege 72: 95–97. Google Scholar

148.

2002: (— & Kaiser Th.): Floristische Angaben Albrecht von Hallers aus Celle und Umgebung in der Mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts. — Florist. Notizen Lüneburger Heide 10: 10–16. Google Scholar

149.

2002: Wörterbuch der Botanik (Neubearbeitung) in der Strasburger-CD-ROM. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

150.

2002: Botanische Gärten und Herbarien und die Emanzipation der Botanik von der Medizin. — Verh. Gesch. Theorie Biol. 8: 57–73. Google Scholar

151.

2002: (Gaisberg M. v. & —); Carduus baeocephalus subsp. microstigma Gaisberg & Wagenitz, a new subspecies from the Canary Islands (Cardueae, Carduinae) — a facultative autogamous descendant of Carduus baeocephalus Webb subsp. baeocephalus. — Candollea 57: 271–282. Google Scholar

152.

2002: Über das Wort Ansalben. — Z. Germanist. Linguistik 30: 252–257. Google Scholar

153.

2003: Wörterbuch der Botanik. Die Termini in ihrem historischen Zusammenhang, ed. 2. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

154.

2003: Floristik und Geobotanik in Göttingen von Albrecht von Haller bis Heinz Ellenberg. — Tuexenia 23: 41–50. Google Scholar

155.

2003: Albrecht von Haller als Botaniker in Göttingen. — Göttinger Jahrb. 51: 15–26. Google Scholar

156.

2003: „Simplex sigillum veri”, auch in der Biologie? — Nachr. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen, II. Math.-Phys. Kl. Jahrg. 2003: 97–114. Google Scholar

157.

2003: (Lange O. L. & —): What is a ‘phycolichen’? Differences and changes in the meaning of an old lichenogical term. — Lichenologist 35: 341–345. Google Scholar

158.

2003: Bary Heinrich Anton de; Candolle Alphonse — Louis — Pierre — Pyramus de; Candolle Augustin-Pyramus de. — Pp. 114, 290–292 in: Hoffmann D., Laitko H. & Müller — Wille S. (ed.), Lexikon der bedeutenden Naturwissenschaftler 1. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

159.

2003: Ifloga, Filago, Cymbolaena. Pp. 129–146 in: Ali S. I. & Qaiser M. (ed.), Flora of Pakistan 210. — Karachi: University of Karachi, Department of Botany. Google Scholar

160.

2004: Gleditsch Johann Gottlieb, Grisebach August Heinrich Rudolf, Hofmeister Friedrich Wilhelm Benedict, Jussieu Antoine Laurent de. — Pp. 105–106, 125, 230–231, 284 in: Hoffmann D., Laitko H. & Müller-Wille S. (ed.), Lexikon der bedeutenden Naturwissenschaftler 2. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

161.

2004: Globulariaceae. — Pp. 159–162 in: Kubitzki K. (ed.), The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants 7. — Berlin: Springer. Google Scholar

162.

2004: Adelbert von Chamisso, Naturforscher, Kustos am Botanischen Museum. — Verh. Bot. Vereins Berlin Brandenburg 137: 29–41. Google Scholar

163.

2004: Adelbert von Chamisso — der Dichter und sein “geliebtes Heu”. — Pp. 272–292 in: Eisner N. & Frick W. (ed.), “Scientia poetica”. Literatur und Naturwissenschaft. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

164.

2004: Mohl Hugo von, Sprengel Christian Konrad, Tournefort Joseph Pitton de. — Pp. 33, 314, 369–370 in: Hoffmann D., Laitko H. & Müller-Wille S. (ed.), Lexikon der bedeutenden Naturwissenschaftler 3. — Heidelberg: Spektrum. Google Scholar

165.

2005: (Greuter W., Aghababian M. & —): Vaillant on Compositae — systematic concepts and nomenclatural impact. — Taxon 54: 149–174. Google Scholar

166.

2005: (Greuter W., Aghababian M. & —): Proposals to conserve the names Bellidiastrum, Berkheya, Euryops, Notobasis, Picnomon and Urospermum (Compositae) against six generic names of Vaillant. — Taxon 54: 196–198. Google Scholar

167.

2005: (Schmull M., Heinrichs J., Baier R., Ullrich D., —, Groth H., Hourticolon S. & Gradstein S. R.): The type database at Göttingen (GOET) — a virtual herbarium online. — Taxon 54: 251–254. Google Scholar

168.

2005: Adelbert von Chamisso als Naturforscher und E.T.A. Hoffmann als Wissenschaftskritiker. — Nachr. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen, Math.-Nat. K1. 2005: 35–60. Google Scholar

169.

2005: Xanthium, Ambrosia, Erigeron, Conyza, Leucanthemum, Filago, Centaurea. — Pp. 660–661, 664–666, 673, 678–679, 691–695 in: Jäger E. J. & Werner K. (ed.), Exkursionsflora von Deutschland 4. Gefäßpflanzen: Kritischer Band. Begründet von W. Rothmaler, ed. 10. — München: Elsevier. Google Scholar

170.

2006: (— & Wissemann V.): “Es scheint, als verrücke die Botanik in Mannheim allen […] den Kopf”. Johannes Hedwig und die Botanik seiner Zeit im Spiegel hier erstmalig editierter und annotierter Briefe der Jahre 1790–1792. — Acta Histor. Leopoldina 46: 431–445. Google Scholar

171.

2006: Volutaria socotrensis Wagenitz, sp. nov. — Engiera 28: 62–65. Google Scholar

172.

2006: (—, Hellwig F. H., Parolly G. & Martins L.): Two new species of Centaurea (Compositae, Cardueae) from Turkey. — Willdenowia 36: 423–435. Google Scholar

173.

2007: A revision of Centaurea (Compositae Cardueae) in the Flora of Iraq. — Rostaniha 7 Suppl. 2: 343–394. Google Scholar

174.

2007: Die Pflanze und ihr Abbild. — Pp. 113–139 in: Eisner N. (ed.), Bilderwelten. Vom farbigen Abglanz der Natur. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

175.

2008: Deutsche Floren. Der Weg vom Latein zum Deutsch, von Linné zum Natürlichen System. — Feddes Repert. 119: 144–151. Google Scholar

176.

2008: 300 Jahre Carl von Linné. — Was bleibt? — Jahrb. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen 2007: 199–205. Google Scholar

177.

2008: (— & Kandemir A.): Two new species of the genus Psephellus (Compositae, Cardueae) from eastern Turkey. — Willdenowia 38: 521–526. Google Scholar

178.

2009: Im Dienste der Flora. Albrecht von Haller und sein Gegenspieler Carl von Linné. — Pp. 207–244 in: Eisner N. & Rupke N. A. (ed.), Albrecht von Halier im Göttingen der Aufklärung. — Göttingen: Wallstein. Google Scholar

179.

2009: (Bonifacio J. M., Robinson H., Funk V. A., Lack H. W., —, Feuillet C. & Hind D. J. N.): A history of research in Compositae: early beginnings to the Reading Meeting (1975). — Pp. 3–38 in: Funk V. A., Susanna A., Stuessy T. F. & Bayer R. J. (ed.), Systematics, Evolution, and Biogeography of Compositae. — Vienna: International Association for Plant Taxonomy. Google Scholar

180.

2010: [“2009”] Die Erforscher der Pflanzenwelt von Berlin und Brandenburg. — Verh. Bot. Vereins Berlin Brandenburg, Beiheft 6: 157–556. Google Scholar

181.

2011: [“2010”] Wie wird man Feldbotaniker? Beispielhafte Lebensläufe märkischer Floristen. — Verb. Bot. Vereins Berlin Brandenburg 143: 39–51. Google Scholar

182.

2011: (Andrés-Sanchez S., Galbany-Casals M., Rico E. & Martínez-Ortega M.): Proposal to conserve the name Filago arvensis (Asteraceae) with a conserved type. — Taxon 60: 599–600. Google Scholar

183.

2011: Biologen als Historiker der Biologie — Fachleute oder Dilettanten? — Pp. 37–66 in: Schmidt-Loske K. & Wägele J. W. (ed.). Zehn Jahre Biohistoricum. 1998–2008. Eine Festschrift. — Berlin-Rangsdorf: Basilisken-Presse. Google Scholar

184.

2011: Botanische Gärten und Bibliotheken in ihrer Zusammenarbeit, besonders in Göttingen. — Z. Bibliothekswesen Bibliogr. Sonderband 104: 225–241. Google Scholar

185.

2012: Lyssenkos Agrobiologie (Lyssenkoismus) contra Genetik in der Sowjetunion und der DDR. — Jahrb. Akad. Wiss. Göttingen 2011: 232–246. Google Scholar

186.

2013: Hermann Wagner und die Illustrierte deutsche Flora. — Kochia 7: 117–120. Google Scholar

187.

2014: Bobycilaena, Centaurea, Cyanus, Filago. — Pp. 224, 230–233, 244, 249 in: Rottensteiner W. K. (ed.), Exkursionsflora von Istrien. — Klagenfurt: Verlag des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins für Kärnten. Google Scholar

188.

2015: Ärgerliches und Lustiges von Pflanzennamen. — Gärtner. — Bot. Brief 199: 54–56. Google Scholar

189.

2015: (— & Lack H. W.): Carl Ludwig Willdenow (1765–1812), ein Botanikerleben in Briefen. — Ann. Hist. Philos. Biol. 17: ix–x, 1–289. Google Scholar

190.

2016: Centaurea, Filago. — Pp. 166–172, 188–193 in: Kleinsteuber A., Ristow M. & Hassler M. (ed.), Flora von Rhodos und Chalki 1. — Karlsruhe: Naturwissenschaftlicher Verlag A. Kleinsteuber. Google Scholar

191.

2016: Herrenhäuser Herbarien. — Pp. 222–233 in: Königliche Gartenbibliothek Herrenhausen. — Hannover: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek (= Schatzkammer 2). Google Scholar

192.

2016: Carl Ludwig Willdenow (1765–1812) — einer der letzten Linneaner — und der Berliner Botanische Garten. — Verb. Bot. Vereins Berlin Brandenburg 148: 5–30. Google Scholar

193.

2016: Treviranus Gottfried Reinhold. — Neue Deutsche Biographie 26: 408–409. — Berlin: Duncker & Humblot. Google Scholar
© 2018 The Authors ·
Hans Walter Lack and Volker Wissemann "Gerhard Wagenitz (1927–2017)," Willdenowia 48(1), 147-160, (1 April 2018). https://doi.org/10.3372/wi.48.48111
Published: 1 April 2018
Back to Top