Ernst Berliner


Ernst Berliner was a German scientist with contributions to microbiology, entomology, and biochemistry.

Life and career

Ernst Berliner was born in Berlin to Albrecht Berliner and Hedwig. He attended the Humboldt Gymnasium, which he left in 1901 with his Abitur. From 1900 to 1904 he studied engineering at the Royal Technical Institute Charlottenburg following which he studied natural sciences at the Frederick William University until 1908, with Oscar Hertwig, Rudolf Virchow, Ludwig Plate, Warburg, Fritz Schaudinn, Max Hartmann, Franz Eilhard Schulze, and Wilhelm von Branca. Afterwards he was active scientifically at the Zoological Institute of the University and the Robert Koch Institute. On 8 May 1909 he received a Dr. phil. with a thesis on flagellates.
From 1909 to 1912 he worked at the :de:Versuchsanstalt für Getreideverarbeitung|Research Institute for Cereal Processing in Berlin as an assistant to Johannes Buchwald and later as department director. Here he studied an infectious disease of flour moth caterpillars, which he named Bacillus thuringiensis. In the summer of 1909, a shipment arrived from a Thuringian mill containing diseased caterpillars, after which an epidemic spread in the institute. In 1911, he first reported their findings in the Zeitschrift für Getreidewesen which he followed in 1915 with the detailed publication "Über die Schlaffsucht der Mehlmottenraupe und ihren Erreger Bacillus thuringiensis" in the Zeitschrift für angewandte Entomologie.
From 1912 to 1914 he was head of the agrochemical control station of the chamber of agriculture for Halle, Saxony-Anhalt. He volunteered after the outbreak of the First World War and served as a lieutenant and company commander in France and Russia, for which he was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd and 1st class.
From 1920 he was senior chemist at the Swedish milling company Malmö Stora Walskvarn and from 1927 Director of the Research Institute for Cereal Chemistry at :de:MIAG|MIAG in Frankfurt.
In 1921, he married Helene Martha Ast. They had two children: Kurt Albrecht and Hildur Hedwig.
In 1931 he founded the independent Research Institute for Cereal Chemistry in Darmstadt-Eberstadt. From 1927 to 1933, he was Associate Professor of Cereal Chemistry at the Technical University of Darmstadt.
During the Nazi era, Berliner was subject to racial and political persecution, including restrictions on his work and prohibitions on publication. From 1936 to 1938, he was able to conduct scientific training courses in Vienna, Prague, Zurich and Paris. In 1944, he and his wife were temporarily detained by the Gestapo.
From 1949 to 1957 with Kurt Neitzert he organized a working group within the Research Institute for Cereal Chemistry in Darmstadt-Eberstadt. In 1950 he initiated the annual Jugenheimer discussion session of the Association of Cereal Chemistry. In 1955, he was awarded the Cross of the Order of Merit.

Literature