Adrian Diel

Adrian Diel
Diel Memorial in the old cemetery of Diez
Commemorative plaque for Adrian Diel on the Eberhard House - Pfaffengasse 27 in Diez

August Friedrich Adrian Diel (born February 4, 1756 in Gladenbach; † April 22, 1839 in Diez) was a German physician and founder of Pomology at the turn of the 19th century.

Life

Adrian Diel’s father Kaspar Ludwig was a surgeon and apothecary. August Friedrich Adrian, after studying in Giessen and Strasbourg, acquired in 1780 in Giessen a Doctorate in Medicine and Surgery. After that, he became a doctor in Gladenbach. In 1786 he served as practitioner of the Count of Spaur, who was Judge at Imperial Court in Wetzlar, and dealt mainly with Balneology. In 1790 he took over the office of spa doctor in Bad Ems (Nassau) and at the same time was the district physician at his residence Diez. In the same year Diel became Aulic Councillor, then Private Councillor of the Duchy of Nassau. He married a native of Diez, Maria Altgelt, but she died soon afterwards. In Diez, in the property known up to this day as "House Eberhard", which his wife had brought into the marriage, Diel planted extensive orchards with reportedly up to 12,000 apple trees.

He gained importance as a breeder of fruits, and as an author of important pomological writings, and laid the basis for the rise of that science in the 19th Century. In addition to his work on the systematics of the fruit trees Diel also exerted political influence to promote fruit cultivation in the Duchy of Nassau. After the vineyards had been largely destroyed in the immediate area of Diez because of pest infestation, Diel also created large plum orchards. The introduction of cherries at higher elevations in the Lahn area and the Nassau government regulation on planting fruit trees by the roadsides and on creating orchards in schools goes back to his initiative.

From his marriage with Adrietta Dorothea Christine, born Scriba, were born seven children.

In 1925 the city of Diez named a newly created road as "Dielstraße". In his native city of Gladenbach there's an „Adrian-Diel-Straße“.

Fruits named after Diel

Works

Literature

External links

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References

  1. Theodor Engelbrecht: Deutschlands Apfelsorten, Braunschweig 1889, Nr.488 S.541.
  2. Engelbrecht, Nr.312 S.349.
  3. Engelbrecht, Nr.412 S.460.
  4. Engelbrecht, Nr.526 S.583.
  5. Jahn, Lucas, Oberdieck:Illustriertes Handbuch der Obstkunde, Bd. 2 (1860), Nr.70 S.163f.
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