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Liebigs Annalen

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(Redirected fromAnnalen der Chemie)

"Ann." redirects here. For other uses, seeAnn (disambiguation).
Not to be confused withAnnales de Chimie.
Academic journal
Liebigs Annalen
1848 cover of the 65th volume
DisciplineChemistry
LanguageGerman, English
Publication details
History1832–1997
Publisher
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4 (alt· Bluebook (alt)
NLM (alt· MathSciNet (altPaid subscription required)
ISO 4Liebigs Ann.
Indexing
CODEN (alt · alt2· JSTOR (alt· LCCN (alt)
MIAR · NLM (alt· Scopus · W&L
CODENLACHDL
ISSN0170-2041
Links

Justus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie (often cited asLiebigs Annalen) was one of the oldest and historically most important journals in the field oforganic chemistry worldwide. It was established in 1832 and edited byJustus von Liebig withFriedrich Wöhler and others until Liebig's death in 1873. The journal was originally titledAnnalen der Pharmacie; its name was changed toJustus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie in 1874. In its first decades of publishing, the journal was both a periodical containing news of the chemical and pharmaceutical fields and a publisher of primary research. During this time, it was noted to contain rebuttals and criticism of the works it published, inserted by Justus von Liebig during his tenure as an editor. After 1874, changes were made to editorial policies, and the journal published only completed research; later on, in the 20th century, its focus was narrowed to only print articles on organic chemistry, though it had always placed emphasis on the field. The journal was especially influential in the mid-19th century, but by the post-World War II period was considered "no longer as preeminent as it once was".

The journal has undergone mergers and changes in name throughout its history, from its inception to changes made following Liebig's death and its eventual consolidation with other journals in the late 20th century. In 1997, the journal merged withRecueil des Travaux Chimiques des Pays-Bas to formLiebigs Annalen/Recueil, and in 1998, it was absorbed byEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry by merger of a number of other national European chemistry journals.[1]

Content

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Many chemical syntheses and discoveries were published inLiebigs Annalen. Among these wereRobert Bunsen andGustav Kirchhoff's discovery ofcaesium and its later isolation byCarl Setterberg,[2]Adolf Windaus' studies on the constitution ofcholesterol andvitamins for which he was awarded the 1928 Nobel prize in Chemistry,[3] and many ofGeorg Wittig's publications, including the preparation ofphenyllithium.[4][5]

Liebigs Annalen published news on advances in chemistry and pharmacy in addition to primary research, mainly during Justus von Liebig's time as editor. From 1839 to 1855, the journal published a summary report of the advances made in chemistry for the year.[6] One example of a news item published in theAnnalen was the discovery ofether as it is used in surgicalanesthesia byHenry Jacob Bigelow,[7] which Liebig had been informed of through a letter fromEdward Everett.[8]Lothar Meyer andDmitri Mendeleev bothpublished their versions of theperiodic table inLiebigs Annalen in 1870 and 1871, respectively, though both had published elsewhere in the years prior to their separate printings of the "full periodic system" in theAnnalen.[9] By 1957, the content ofLiebigs Annalen was entirely organic chemistry.[6]

Under Liebig's editorship

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As an editor, Justus von Liebig would often promote his own work in the journal. Liebig would also publish his criticism on articles published in the journal, including attacks ontheoretical frameworks of organic chemistry that were in conflict with his support ofradical theory.[10] These criticisms were later described by chemist and historianJ. R. Partington in his seriesA History of Chemistry:[11]

As editor of the Annalen, Liebig criticised others freely, and sometimes showed poor judgment, e.g. in his violent attack on a factual paper on hydrogen persulphide by Thenard. A paper on benzene by Mitscherlich is full of critical footnotes by Liebig, and as if this were not enough, he added a critical 'Nachtrag' and an 'Erklärung'. His criticisms of Laurent and Gerhardt (see p. 411) and of Mulder (see p. 319) exceeded all reason.[12]

The journal as it appeared in 1882, after Liebig's death

Similarly, on Liebig andHermann Kolbe, a contemporary organic chemist of similar reputation, J. P. Phillips of theUniversity of Louisville Department of Chemistry wrote "...that the polemical outbursts for which Liebig and Kolbe were famous were not mere episodes in low comedy but a reasonably consistent defense of the conservative position that organic theory must develop from experiment alone."[10] Following Liebig's death,Jacob Volhard, head of the group publishing theAnnalen in 1878, altered the policies of the journal to only accept and print finished research papers not already printed in other papers and "to exclude articles of apolemical nature".[6]

History

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The history ofLiebigs Annalen started with the monthlyMagazin für Pharmacie und die dahin einschlagenden Wissenschaften, a work printed inLemgo andHeidelberg (later exclusively in Heidelberg), edited by professor of pharmacyPhilipp Lorenz Geiger, that Justus von Liebig joined in 1831 as co-editor.[13] The name was changed by the end of 1831 toMagazin für Pharmacie und Experimentalkritik, in the following year merged with theArchiv der Pharmazie, then known as theArchiv des Apothekervereins im nördlichen Teutschland,[6] edited byRudolph Brandes.[14] In 1834, theNeues Journal der Pharmazie fur Arzte, Apotheker und Chemiker was merged with theAnnalen, resulting in a brief period wherein there were 4 editors: Liebig, Brandes, Geiger, andJohann Trommsdorff.[6] The first volume of the journal after the merger included papers from several well-known names in chemistry, includingJöns Jacob Berzelius andJoseph Louis Gay-Lussac, not to mention Liebig himself.[15] Brandes withdrew from the journal in 1835 due to disagreements with Liebig, going on to publish theArchiv der Pharmazie independently;[14]Annalen der Pharmacie was renamed toAnnalen der Chemie und Pharmacie on the publication of volume 33[16] in 1840 in an effort to be more inclusive of the related fields of research in chemistry and thus broaden the potential audience.[6][17]

In 1837, Liebig left Germany for Britain to meet with the British Association for the Advancement of Science and to market his work,[18] and around that time met withThomas Graham andJean-Baptiste Dumas. Upon returning to Germany, due to the perceived poor quality of theAnnalen while he was away, Liebig fired his co-editors Emanuel Merck andFriedrich Mohr, making himself the sole editor of theAnnalen. At this point, the journal was starting publication outside of Germany, namely in France and England. Liebig acknowledged "the cooperation" of Graham and Dumas from 1838 to 1842, but would break away from them in 1842, and remained the only editor until 1851, at which point he invitedHermann Kopp to take over management of the journal; Kopp's name would appear on the title page of the journal as editor from 1851 until his death in 1892, though several other editors, including Jacob Volhard, joined the editorial board during his tenure.[6]

After Liebig's death in 1873, the journal's name was changed toJustus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie und Pharmazie.[6] This name was shortened toJustus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie beginning with volume 173 in 1974,[19][20] which was kept until it was merged with the Dutch journalRecueil des Travaux Chimiques des Pays-Bas in 1997. Shortly before the merger, in 1995,Liebigs Annalen started publishing articles in English. The resulting publication, titledLiebigs Annalen/Recueil, became part of theEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry in January 1998.[21]

Prior to the mergers in the late 20th century,Liebigs Annalen faced difficulties due to paper shortages and reduced research publication duringWorld War I, the deaths of several editors in the 1910s, and further publishing difficulties duringWorld War II. For several years prior to World War II, several Nobel Prize recipients served on the editorial board, includingRichard Willstätter,Adolf Windaus,Heinrich Otto Wieland,Hans Fischer andRichard Kuhn. Publications in the during- and post-war period were fewer in number and had poor paper quality due to shortages, and printing moved from Heidelberg toMunich in 1945 and toWeinheim by 1947. By the later 1950s, printing volume and quality had been brought back to pre-war averages,[6] but by this point the journal was described as "no longer as preeminent as it once was".[20]

Editors

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The editorial board ofLiebigs Annalen throughout its history has included many notable figures in German chemistry:[6]

EditorTenureNotes
Philipp Lorenz Geiger1824-1836
Justus von Liebig1831-1873Managing editor
Rudolph Brandes1832-1835[14]
Johann Trommsdorff1834-1837
Heinrich Emanuel Merck1836-1838
Karl Friedrich Mohr1837-1838
Thomas Graham1838-1842
Jean-Baptiste Dumas1838-1842
Friedrich Wöhler1838-1882[20]
Hermann Kopp1851-1892
Emil Erlenmeyer1873-1909Junior editor
Jacob Volhard1873-1910Junior editor, managing editor post-1878
August Wilhelm von Hofmann1874-1892
August Kekulé1874-1896
Wilhelm Rudolph Fittig1896-1910Succeeded Kekulé
Otto Wallach1897-1931
Adolf von Baeyer1897-1917
Emil Fischer1907-1919
Johannes Thiele1910-1918Managing editor, succeeded Volhard
Carl Graebe1911-1927Succeeded Erlenmeyer
Theodor Zincke1911-1928Succeeded Fittig
Richard Willstätter1917-1938Succeeded Baeyer
Wilhelm Wislicenus1918-1922Managing editor, succeeded Thiele
Heinrich Otto Wieland1922-1957
Adolf Windaus1927-1957
Hans Fischer1928-1945
Richard Kuhn1948-1967
Klaus Hafner1967-2002[22][a]Editor and senior editor
Robert Temme1979-2016[23][a]Managing editor[21]

Title history

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Notes

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  1. ^abContinued working as an editor through the transition fromLiebigs Annalen to its successor publicationEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry.

References

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  1. ^"Overview".Chemistry Europe.Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved5 February 2024.
  2. ^Dronsfield, Alan (June 30, 2010)."Look who discovered caesium..."RSC Education. Retrieved2024-07-29.
  3. ^Wolf, George (June 2004)."The Discovery of Vitamin D: The Contribution of Adolf Windaus".The Journal of Nutrition.134 (6):1299–1302.doi:10.1093/jn/134.6.1299.PMID 15173387.
  4. ^Tochtermann, Werner (March 1997)."Georg Wittig (1897–1987)".Liebigs Annalen.1997 (3).doi:10.1002/jlac.199719970303.ISSN 0947-3440.
  5. ^Goedecke, Catharina (June 16, 2022)."125th Birthday: Georg Wittig".ChemistryViews.doi:10.1002/chemv.202200048.
  6. ^abcdefghijVan Klooster, H. S. (January 1957)."The story of Liebig's Annalen der Chemie".Journal of Chemical Education.34 (1): 27.Bibcode:1957JChEd..34...27V.doi:10.1021/ed034p27.ISSN 0021-9584.Archived from the original on 2024-04-24. Retrieved2024-07-02.
  7. ^von Liebig, Justus (1847). "Chirurgische Operationen unter dem Einflusse des Aetherdampfes" [Surgical operations under the influence of ether].Ann. Chem. Pharm.61:246–248.
  8. ^Schwarz, W; Hintzenstern, U.v (December 2002)."Justus von Liebig (1803–1873): a chemist's contributions to anaesthesia".International Congress Series.1242:323–328.doi:10.1016/S0531-5131(02)00719-7.
  9. ^Meyer, Michal (June 19, 2013)."An Element of Order".Science History Institute.Archived from the original on June 24, 2024. RetrievedJuly 2, 2024.
  10. ^abPhillips, J. P. (1966-01-01)."Liebig and Kolbe, Critical Editors".Chymia.11:89–97.doi:10.2307/27757261.ISSN 0095-9367.JSTOR 27757261.
  11. ^Gebelein, Helmut (2004)."Justus Liebig: Life and Work"(PDF).Acta Universitatis Lodziensis: Folia Chimica (13).
  12. ^Partington, James Riddick (1961).A history of chemistry. London: Macmillan; New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 299.ISBN 978-0-333-08366-6.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  13. ^Ulrike, Thomas (1987)."Philipp Lorenz Geiger und Justus Liebig " ... alles um des verdammten Geldes wegen"?".Gießener Universitätsblätter (in German).20 (1):21–22.
  14. ^abcFriedrich, Christoph; Helmstädter, Axel (January 2022)."Archiv der Pharmazie—200 years".Archiv der Pharmazie.355 (1).doi:10.1002/ardp.202100392.ISSN 0365-6233.Archived from the original on 2024-04-25. Retrieved2024-07-02.
  15. ^Nagendrappa, Gopalpur (August 2013)."Justus Freiherr von Liebig".Resonance.18 (8): 709.doi:10.1007/s12045-013-0092-5.ISSN 0971-8044.
  16. ^Royal Society of London (1 January 1875)."Obituary Notices of Fellows Deceased".Proceedings of the Royal Society of London.24:xxvii–xxxvii. Retrieved5 February 2024.
  17. ^Blondel-Mégrelis, Marika (2007)."Liebig or How to Popularize Chemistry"(PDF).Hyle: International Journal for Philosophy of Chemistry.13 (1):43–54. Retrieved17 November 2014.
  18. ^Munday, Pat (1998)."Politics by Other Means: Justus von Liebig and the German Translation of John Stuart Mill's "Logic"".The British Journal for the History of Science.31 (4):403–418.doi:10.1017/S0007087498003379.ISSN 0007-0874.JSTOR 4027874.
  19. ^Leicester, Henry Marshall (1971).The historical background of chemistry. New York: Dover Publications. p. 214.ISBN 0486610535.Archived from the original on 2019-06-27. Retrieved5 February 2024.
  20. ^abcYagello, Virginia E. (June 1968). "Early history of the chemical periodical".Journal of Chemical Education.45 (6). Division of Chemical Education:426–429.Bibcode:1968JChEd..45..426Y.doi:10.1021/ed045p426.ISSN 0021-9584.
  21. ^abEngberts, Jan B. F. N.; Hafner, Klaus; Hopf, Henning (September 20, 1997). Temme, Robert (ed.)."What is going to become ofChemische Berichte/Recueil andLiebigs Annalen/Recueil?"(PDF).Jahrgang.Archived(PDF) from the original on May 28, 2024. RetrievedJuly 2, 2024.
  22. ^Hopf, Henning; Reissig, Hans-Ulrich (9 December 2021). "In Memory of Klaus Hafner".European Journal of Organic Chemistry (46):6172–6174.doi:10.1002/ejoc.202101393.
  23. ^Ross, Haymo (2017-01-03)."EurJOC Keeps It Rolling".European Journal of Organic Chemistry.2017 (1):2–3.doi:10.1002/ejoc.201601564.ISSN 1434-193X.

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