Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Bucholz

Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Bucholz

Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Bucholz

Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Bucholz
Born 23 December 1734 (1734-12-23)
Bernburg
Died 16 December 1798 (1798-12-17) (aged 63)
Weimar
Occupation German pharmacist

Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Bucholz (23 December 1734, Bernburg – 16 December 1798, Weimar) was a German pharmacist and chemist.

Trained as a pharmacist in Magdeburg and Weimar, he later studied medicine at the University of Jena, where he obtained his doctorate in 1764. Several years later, he became head of the Hofapotheke (court pharmacy) in Weimar. Here, Johann Friedrich August Göttling worked as his assistant and Johann Trommsdorff served as an apprentice.[1] As his career progressed, he received the posts of Hof-Medikus (court physician, 1777) and Bergrat (counsellor of mines, 1782).[2]

He was a friend and consultant to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe on the matter of scientific issues. Reportedly, the two men conducted water purification experiments through the use of powdered charcoal. Bucholz remained an honored member of Goethe's Freitagsgesellschaft up until his death in 1798.[3]

Selected works

References

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