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Bust of Lutz Heck in Berlin zoo. Ludwig Georg Heinrich Heck, called Lutz Heck (23 April 1892 in Berlin, German Empire – 6 April 1983 in Wiesbaden, West Germany) was a German zoologist, animal researcher, animal book author and director of the Berlin Zoological Garden where he succeeded his father in 1932.
Joe Heck, American politician; Ludwig Heck (1860–1951), German zoo director, father of Heinz and Lutz Heck; Lutz Heck (1892–1983), German zoo director; Max W. Heck (1869–1938), American politician; Paul Heck (born 1967), American music producer; Peter Heck (born 1941), American science fiction author; Richard F. Heck (1931–2015 ...
The encyclopedia was an international collaboration by a large number of scientists including Theodor Haltenorth, Wolfgang Gewalt, Heinz-Georg Klös, Konrad Lorenz, Heinz Heck, Lutz Heck, Jean Dorst, Constantine Walter Benson, Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt, Helmut Sick, Heini Hediger, Wolfgang Makatsch, Erich Thenius, Erna Mohr, Adolf Portmann ...
Geheimrat Heck mit kleinen Negerkindern im Garten des Berliner Zoos. Seit 1888 leitet der verdienstvolle Tierfreund Geheimrat Heck den Berliner Zoologischen Garten. Als Nachfolger wird sein Sohn die Leitung übernehmen. Headline: Berliner Zoo, Ludwig Heck: Author: o.Ang. Credit/Provider: Bundesarchiv: Short title: Bild 102-12796: IIM version: 2 ...
Ludwig Franz Friedrich Georg Heck (11 August 1860 – 17 July 1951) was a German zoologist who served as the director of Berlin Zoo from 1888 to 1931. He was the father of the zoologists Lutz and Heinz Heck. Heck was a national socialist and on his 80th birthday he was personally awarded the Goethe Medal for Art and Science by Adolf Hitler.
The actions of Lutz Heck and his animal breeding experiments were also a matter of historical record, although the intimate relationship of the protagonist, Antonina, and the antagonist, Heck, is exaggerated. However, the defiance of Nazi occupation and ultimately, the rescue of over 300 Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto were depicted accurately.
Zoo director Lutz Heck was named chief of the Oberste Naturschütz Behörde im Reichsforstamt (highest nature preservation agency in the state department of forestry) by his friend Hermann Göring in the summer of 1938 and in this capacity he was the senior responsible person for the entire nature management. [7]
She then moved to Berlin where she married Oskar Heinroth in 1933. When he died in 1945 and with the escape of the earlier Nazi director, Lutz Heck (whose father Ludwig Heck had also worked in the Berlin zoo), she was given charge as scientific director of the Berlin zoo and helped restore it from the damages of war. Of the 4000 animals in the ...