Johan Reinhardt
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Johan Christopher Hagemann Reinhardt (1776 – 1845) was a professor in zoology at the University of Copenhagen.
Johannes Christopher Hagemann Reinhardt zoologist, born December 19 1776 in Rendalen parish in Norway, where his father, Johannes Henrik Reinhardt, was a priest at the time. His mother, Johanne Elisabeth Mommesen, was from Holmestrand (Norway). He was not baptized Johannes, but adopted the name later. After having been educated at home, he came to Copenhagen in 1792 and entered the university in 1793, where he passed the first 2 examinations, but after that spent almost two years at home, where he used the opportunity to study plants and animals. In 1796 he returned to Copenhagen to study theology, but his tendencies pulled him away from this study and towards natural history. He became a disciple of Martin Vahl, with whose help he in 1801 got the opportunity to travel abroad, where he stayed until 1806 (in the beginning in fact as a mentor for a son of the titular councillor of state J.C.C. Brun). R. at first studied mineralogy at the academy of mining in Freiberg, later primarily zoology and anatomy in Göttingen and finally in Paris. During his stay there he received an appointment as an inspector for that part of the newly established Royal Museum for Natural History which was founded by acquiring the collections of the Society for Natural History in 1805 and which was located in a farmhouse in Østergade. He was just about to start as a private tutor in a German family in Normandy, but accepted happily the post as inspector instead, although the annual salary was only 200 Rdl. (Rigsdaler), because he now felt it possible to return home without having to choose between "death from hunger or practising Law"). He remained in Paris for a few months more and tried to extend his rather insufficient knowledge by studying in the museums and by following Georges Cuvier's lectures, that had excited his enthusiasm. In the fall of 1806 he returned and immediately took over the management of the collection. In 1809 he started giving lectures in the museum, and when professor J. Rathke had been transferred to Christiania (Oslo), he was also employed by the university in 1813, at first as a senior lecturer and the year after as a professor extraordinarius in natural history. In 1821 he became a member of the Society for the Sciences, 1830 ordinary professor (ordinarius) and a member of the Academic Council; 1836 he was appointed honourable Doctor of Philosophy, and 1839 he became titular councillor of state. In 1814 he married to Mette Margrethe Nicoline Hammeleff (1782-1831), a daughter of titular councillor of state N. Hammeleff and Juliane Marie Hammeleff, born Pontoppidan.
Both at the royal museum and the university the double obligation of holding lectures and managing collections rested upon Reinhardt's shoulders.