Ludwig Haberlandt

Ludwig Haberlandt
Born 1 February 1885
Graz
Died 22 July 1932
Suicide
Nationality Austria
Known for Hormonal contraception

Ludwig Haberlandt (1 February 1885 – 22 July 1932) is known as a father of hormonal contraception. In 1921 he carried out experiments on rabbits and he demonstrated a temporary hormonal contraception in a female by transplanting ovaries from a second, pregnant, animal.

His father was the eminent botanist, Gottlieb Haberlandt, plant tissue culture theorist and visionary; his grandfather was the European 'soybean' pioneer and trailblazer Friedrich J. Haberlandt.[1][2]

In 1930 he began clinical trials after successful production of a hormonal preparation, Infecundin®, by the G. Richter Company in Budapest, Hungary. He ended his 1931 book, Die hormonale Sterilisierung des weiblichen Organismus, with a visionary claim: 'Unquestionably, practical application of the temporary hormonal sterilization in women would markedly contribute to the ideal in human society already enunciated a generation earlier by Sigmund Freud (1898). Theoretically, one of the greatest triumphs of mankind would be the elevation of procreation into a voluntary and deliberate act.' He was hounded for his views on reproductive biology up to his death from either suicide.[3][4] or heart attack. [5]

References

  1. http://www.soyinfocenter.com/HSS/friedrich_haberlandt1.php
  2. http://www.springerlink.com/content/n055345662r754w0/
  3. http://www.springerlink.com/content/n055345662r754w0/
  4. http://www.springerlink.com/content/0548583t7788r763/
  5. https://www.inkling.com/read/clinical-gynecologic-endocrinology-infertility-8th/chapter-22/the-history-of-oral


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