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Curt Kosswig

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Curt Kosswig
Born(1903-10-30)30 October 1903
Died29 March 1982(1982-03-29) (aged 78)
Burial placeAşiyan Asri Cemetery, Istanbul, Turkey
NationalityGerman
OccupationUniversity professor
Years active1927–1969
Partner
Leonore
(m. 1930⁠–⁠1973)
ChildrenTwo sons
Academic background
EducationZoology, genetics
Alma materHumboldt University of Berlin
Thesis"Das Gen in fremder Erbmasse", ("The Gene in Foreign Genotypes") (1927)
Doctoral advisorErwin Bauer
Academic work
Institutions

Curt Kosswig (sometimes spelled "Koßwig") (30 October 1903, Berlin – 29 March 1982, Hamburg) was a German zoologist and geneticist, who spent most of his career at the University of Istanbul (1937–1955) and Hamburg University (1955–1969). Curt Kosswig is known as the Father of Turkish Zoology.[1]

Early life

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Curt Kosswig was born in Berlin, German Empire. He attended Berlin's Schöneberg Hohenzollern School (Hohenzollernschule),[2] graduating in 1922. Afterwards, he studied Zoology, and Genetics in the Faculty of Natural Sciences at the Humboldt University of Berlin, where he completed his PhD in 1927.

In 1930, he married Leonore (1904–1973), who was also a biologist. They would become acclaimed as a husband and wife research team in Turkey. They had two sons, the older of whom is named Kurt Kosswig (Kurt with a 'K' rather than his father's 'C') who became a chemist.

Academic career

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Curt Kosswig was a lifetime academic and scholar, widely published and well-respected within a wide range of fields but primarily zoology. Among his important scientific publications were advances in the understanding of sex-determination systems, carcinogenesis, constructive and regressive evolution, genetics of house pets, zoological geography, and species classification.

His research interests and fields of study widened considerably once he arrived in Turkey, and was able to found an entire department from the ground up.

Early rise in academia: pre-1927

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Completing his bachelor's degree at the University of Berlin, in the mid-1920s, he began to study for a PhD in genetics under Professor Erwin Bauer.[2]

Kosswig published his first academic paper in 1925[3] in the German Journal for the Study of Animal Breeding and Hereditary Science (German: Zeitschrift für Tierzüchtung und Züchtungsbiologie). He was only 21 years old upon publication of his first paper. Another of his papers was accepted for publication in 1926.

Kosswig was awarded a doctorate (PhD) in genetics on 1 April 1927, at age 23. In this year, he published his doctoral research work as The Gene in Foreign Genotypes (German: Das Gen in fremder Erbmasse). He had conducted experiments with cyprinodonts, which were groundbreaking in the field of genetics, which "anticipated the concept now known as gene transfer in carcinogenesis."[4]

Additionally, Kosswig published eleven more academic papers as a young PhD, from 1927 to 1929, for a total fourteen published papers by his 26th birthday.[5]

Early career in Germany, 1927–33

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As Germany's situation deteriorated, and the Depression deepened, Kosswig's academic career soared, with seventeen more papers published between 1930 and 1933 for a prolific total of 31 papers published before his 30th birthday in late 1933. (In total, he authored or coauthored 152 papers that were published in journals between 1925 and 1948 alone, with many more later.)

In 1927, he got a job as an assistant professor at Münster University in Münster, Germany. Kosswig worker there for six years, starting the very semester that a Leopold von Ubisch (1886–1965) took over the Zoology Department. Kosswig would remain loyal to von Ubisch in the 1930s when Ubisch came under political persecution.

On 1 April 1933, he left Münster to be installed as a professor at Braunschweig University of Technology.[6] He retained this position until fall 1937, when he abruptly left for Turkey. The story of his emigration to Turkey belongs more in the realm of politics.

Involvement in politics and Rassenkunde, 1933–36

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Kosswig was not a member of any political party before 1933.[7] In November 1933, Kosswig joined the SS, an elite branch of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). His relations with the Nazi Party were never warm, though, as demonstrated by the events of 1935 in Münster. He supported the principles of academic freedom and supported all academic non-conformists who came under political persecution by the state.[8]

While at Braunschweig from 1933 onward, Kosswig came under the purview of the newly created SS Race and Settlement Main Office (German: Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt der SS, RuSHA) under Walther Darre. Kosswig was asked to serve as an educator for this organization. Part of his duties included lecturing NSDAP party members and groups of interested citizens about genetics and racial anthropology (called Rassenkunde).[9]

Kosswig preferred the academic world to the political, and had never registered with any political party in his 20s.[10] In November 1933, Kosswig joined the SS[11] (see note for possible reasons), an elite branch of the NSDAP (Nazi Party). His relations with the Nazi Party were never warm, though, as demonstrated by the events of 1935 in Münster.

The Munster Zoology Department chairmanship crisis, 1934–36

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From 1933, the new German government instituted a policy of encouraging Jewish professors to leave German universities, especially those seen to be in positions of political importance. The head of the Munster Zoology Department, Professor von Ubisch, was half-Jewish and seen as politically unreliable. After a long controversy, Ubisch was finally dismissed from his post as head of the Zoology Department at Munster University in 1935, after which he emigrated to Norway. Kosswig, who had worked with Ubisch for six years at Munster, maintained his support for Ubisch.

Following the dismissal of his former superior, Kosswig was asked to take up the chair. He declined.[12] As the authorities looked for possible candidates to replace Ubisch, the entire local academic community became involved, some supporting Ubisch and some opposing him. Ubisch's two assistants were fired. Kosswig (then an assistant professor at Braunschweig University) secured jobs for both of the dismissed assistants. This, on top of refusing to take the seat itself in protest, lost him favor in the eyes of the party. These are factors which may have contributed to his own decision to leave Germany in 1937.

Emigration to Turkey, 1937

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Following the "Ubisch succession crisis" in Münster, Kosswig left the SS in 1936.[13]

He also started thinking about leaving Germany itself, which he did in autumn 1937 at the invitation of the University of Istanbul and some German professors, who were already there. In doing so, he became one of the 190 total German academics, who emigrated to Turkey during the 1930s in Germany.[14]

Kosswig remained outside Germany during World War II (1939–1945) and the occupation and reconstruction of Germany (Wiederaufbau) periods, but retained active contact with his European colleagues, exchanging materials, information, and research.

Career in Turkey, 1937–55

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His output was prolific in his Turkish years, with hundreds of articles published, and an entire major university department being built around him at Istanbul. The Zoology Department at the University of Istanbul, which still exists today, is considered to have been entirely founded by Curt Kosswig.

Already in 1937, Kosswig was appointed director of the Istanbul Zoology Museum. He oversaw its expansion and "collected examples of mammals, birds, reptiles, frogs, fish and various invertebrates, which he brought in the museum contributing to its enrichment."

In these years, Kosswig expanded his field of study to include mammals, comparative genetics, gender inheritance, tumor genetics, gene manifestation, Anatolian fauna, and even continental drift theory. He worked with and encouraged his doctoral students to study, among other things, hereditary tumors in animals, fish polygenic sex determination, freshwater and marine fish in Anatolia, animal species systematics, giant chromosome structure, fish intersexuality, DDT effects, and symbiotic nitrogen fixation in bacteria.[2]

Kosswig discovered, identified, and named many new species in this time, including the rare Saz Baligi which means "reed fish" (Garra kemali) and Gölçük toothcarp (Aphanius splendens). In 1942, a colleague Dr. Sözer named a new genus of scaleless killifish Kosswigichthys in his honor. In 1945, Kosswig and this same colleague described a similar genus as Anatolichthys in honor of their place of origin in Anatolia.

Kosswig continued publishing and research, and even took up the role of "adventurer" in search of new and lost species. In this context, in 1950, he became one of the first Europeans allowed by Turkey to cross the Euphrates into southeastern Turkey, on a voyage he organized and led "in pursuit of two ancient species—a saltwater fish in the hills above Lake Van and the fabled bald ibis of Birecik".[15]

Kosswig is also remembered as the founder of the bird sanctuary at Lake Manyas, now called Lake Kuş (literally "Lake Bird") in northwestern Turkey, which still exists today[2] In 1959, the area around the Lake Kuş was declared Kuşcenneti National Park ("Bird Paradise National Park"), and later a Ramsar site.[16]

Back in Germany, 1955–69

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Kosswig returned to Germany in 1955 at the invitation of the University of Hamburg. He worked there for fourteen years until being bestowed the title of Professor Emeritus in 1969. He served as the director of the Zoological Institute and the Zoological Museum at Hamburg University.

Death

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Curt Kosswig died in Hamburg on 29 March 1982. His body was transferred to Istanbul upon his last will. On 8 April 1982, he was buried in the Aşiyan Asri Cemetery following a ceremony held in the Central Building of Istanbul University.[17]

Lifetime honors

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  • Honorary Doctorate awarded by the University of Istanbul,[18] whose zoology department he founded.
  • In 2003, in honor of the centenary of Curt Kosswig's birth, the faculties for Natural Sciences and Marine Sciences of the University of Istanbul and the Zoological Department and Museum of the University of Hamburg held a joint memorial symposium in honor of his life and work.[19]

Tributes

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1942:The monospecific genus Kosswigichthys is named after him. (See above)

1947:The monospecific genus of beetles Kosswigia is named after him.

1955:The smooth newt Lissotriton kosswigi is named after him.

1960:The barb Carasobarbus kosswigi honors Kosswig, because he collected the type specimen of this species among others he collected in Turkey.[20]

1963:The genus of planthopper bugs Kosswigianella is named after him.

1964:The stone loach Turcinoemacheilus kosswigi honors Kosswig, because he collected the type specimen of this species among others he collected in Turkey.[21]

1965:The bristletail Japyx kosswigi is named after him.

1969:A scraper barb Capoeta kosswigi was proposed but later reduced to a synonym.

1971:A barbel Luciobarbus kosswigi was proposed but later reduced to a synonym.

1972:The chub Squalius kosswigi honors Kosswig, because he collected the type specimen of this species among others he collected in Turkey.[1]

2017:The minnow Alburnoides kosswigi honors Kosswig for being the “Father of ichthyology in Turkey".[1]

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Family LEUCISCIDAE: Subfamily LEUCISCINAE Bonaparte 1835 (European Minnows)". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. 25 January 2024. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d Curt Kosswig Biography Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine at ege.edu.tr, written in honor of Kosswig's 100th birthday in 2003.
  3. ^ List of Curt Kosswig publications Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine (German)
  4. ^ Biologists Under Hitler by Ute Deichmann [1999] page 25
  5. ^ List of Curt Kosswig Publications Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine (German)
  6. ^ "From chapter "Herausforderung" The Past, as Viewed by a Physicist: Hans Kopfermann, 1895–1963 (A study of science) by Klaus Schlüpmann". Archived from the original on May 13, 2010. Retrieved April 16, 2014.
  7. ^ Biologists Under Hitler By Ute Deichmann [1999], page 73
  8. ^ Biologists Under Hitler by Ute Deichmann [1999] page 25
  9. ^ ... Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine "Er [Kosswig] war nicht nur für die Lehrerausbildung zuständig, sondern sollte Rassenkunde und Gesellschaftsbiologie auch für andere Studierende sowie für Parteimitglieder und die interessierte Bevölkerung lehren"
  10. ^ Biologists Under Hitler By Ute Deichmann [1999], page 73
  11. ^ From chapter "Herausforderung" The Past, as Viewed by a Physicist: Hans Kopfermann, 1895–1963 (A study of science) by Klaus Schlüpmann Archived May 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine (German: Vergangenheit im Blickfeld eines Physikers: Hans Kopfermann 1895–1963 (Eine Wissenschaftsstudie)) ; Note: In this book, the author speculates that Curt Kosswig, among many other academics of the time, joined the SS solely to "stabilize", or advance, his career. Ute Deichmann (Biologists Under Hitler) claims that Kosswig "was at first quite willing to work with the NDAP".
  12. ^ Biologists Under Hitler By Ute Deichmann [1999], page 73
  13. ^ From chapter "Herausforderung" The Past, as Viewed by a Physicist: Hans Kopfermann, 1895–1963 (A study of science) by Klaus Schlüpmann Archived May 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine (German: Vergangenheit im Blickfeld eines Physikers: Hans Kopfermann 1895–1963 (Eine Wissenschaftsstudie) (German);
  14. ^ Turkey’s Invitations to Nazi-Persecuted Intellectuals Circa 1933 Archived August 1, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Article: Beyond the Euphrates: The Photography of Cafer Turkmen published in Cornucopia Magazine, Volume 30. "The expeditions undertaken by Curt Kosswig and photographed by Cafer Türkmen provide the first views of Turkey's eastern frontierland, which, for security reasons, had been hidden from outside view from 1914 until 1950. The moment that the curtain was lifted, this remote, dramatic country with a profoundly ancient culture immediately began to lure travellers, historians and scientists such as Kosswig, who undertook two small but ground-breaking expeditions, in 1952 and 1954. / An exile from pre-war Nazi Germany, Kosswig had become a doyen of the newly created department of zoology at Istanbul University, where he nurtured ambitions to create a Turkish natural history museum. / It was for this project that he recruited Cafer Türkmen, a talented young photographer and pupil of the fledgling academic study of photography as art. Although Kosswig never realised his museum plan, by taking Türkmen on his expeditions, he gave the young photographer the opportunity of compiling a unique body of work on Turkey's rich animal life. / Born in Berlin in 1903, Kosswig had left Germany in 1937 after a spate of Nazi-prompted sackings: his area of research, genetics, made his position particularly sensitive. With his wife, Leonore, a trained botanist, he made his home in Istanbul, becoming part of the substantial intellectual diaspora that did so much to drag Turkish academic life into the modern age in the early decades of the Republic. / Today the Kosswigs are best remembered in Turkey for founding the nature reserve at Manyas, near Bandırma on the Sea of Marmara. They set up the reserve soon after they arrived in the country, having observed its extraordinary and fragile habitat, which feeds and shelters migrating and nesting birds."
  16. ^ "Kuşcenneti Milli Parkı" (in Turkish). Tarım ve Orman Bakanlığı – 2. Bölge Müdürlüğü. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  17. ^ Küçükbalkaya, H. Kübra (29 October 2022). "Bir Gün Sapanca'ya O Geldi; Curt KOSSWIG". Sapanca (in Turkish). Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  18. ^ The Emigration of German Scientists to Turkey, 1933–1945 by Klaus Velten (German: Die Emigration deutscher Wissenschaftler in die Türkei 1933–1945) published by Diplomica Verlag, Hamburg 1998
  19. ^ German Scientists in Turkey After 1933: Curt Kosswig and his Major Importance for Zoological Research and Education Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Family CYPRINIDAE: Subfamily TORINAE Karaman 1971 (Large Barbs)". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. 16 April 2024. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
  21. ^ "Family NEMACHEILIDAE Regan 1911 (Stone or Brook Loaches)". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. 25 June 2024. Retrieved 31 July 2024.