Albin Haller
See also: To haul
Albin Haller , born with Fellering the March 7th 1849 and dead on May 1st 1925, is a French chemist.
He attends initially the higher elementary school of Wesserling, then becomes apprentice carpenter in his father. Noticed by the local pharmacist, it is sent in a pharmacist of Munster which had learned chemistry with Jacquemin, raises of Gerhardt, whose name at the School of pharmacy of Strasbourg is related to the history of the salicylated . He is science graduate in Strasbourg in 1870. In 1872, it follows the course of the University of pharmacy lately created to Nancy. It obtains in Paris a thesis of science doctor on the Camphre. Lecturer in 1879, he is professor in 1884. He is director of the chemical Institut of Nancy, created in 1892, then professor in 1899 with the Sorbonne where he succeeds Charles Friedel with the pulpit of organic chemistry. He is director of the University of industrial physics and chemistry of the town of Paris in 1905 and chair chemical Société of France. In 1900, he is elected member of the Academy of Science, of which he is president in 1923. He is also member of the Académie of medicine and the Académie of agriculture of France. He receives the Davy Médaille of the Royal Society of London in 1917.
His wife is Lucie Comon, cousin German of Henri Poincaré.
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