Kurt Josten

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kurt_Josten an entity of type: Thing

Conrad Hermann Hubertus Maria Apollinaris „Kurt“ Josten, auch bekannt als C. H. Josten (* 7. Juni 1912 in Neuss; † 10. Juli 1994 ebenda) (Pseudonym: Anton Cordeis [ein Anagramm seines Klarnamens]), war ein deutsch-britischer Jurist, Staatsbeamter und Widerstandskämpfer. Später arbeitete er als Wissenschaftshistoriker in Oxford. rdf:langString
Conrad Hermann Hubertus Maria Apollinaris Josten (7 June 1912 in Neuss, Germany – 10 July 1994 in Neuss), known as Kurt Josten or C. H. Josten, was a historian of science and Curator of the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford in England. In 1935 Josten achieved a doctorate in law from the, University of Erlangen. However, he gave up law due to disillusionment about the state of law in Germany under the Nazis. Also in 1935, he visited England, including Oxford. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Kurt Josten
rdf:langString Kurt Josten
xsd:integer 30795801
xsd:integer 1085964667
rdf:langString Curator of the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford
xsd:integer 1964
rdf:langString Conrad Hermann Hubertus Maria Apollinaris „Kurt“ Josten, auch bekannt als C. H. Josten (* 7. Juni 1912 in Neuss; † 10. Juli 1994 ebenda) (Pseudonym: Anton Cordeis [ein Anagramm seines Klarnamens]), war ein deutsch-britischer Jurist, Staatsbeamter und Widerstandskämpfer. Später arbeitete er als Wissenschaftshistoriker in Oxford.
rdf:langString Conrad Hermann Hubertus Maria Apollinaris Josten (7 June 1912 in Neuss, Germany – 10 July 1994 in Neuss), known as Kurt Josten or C. H. Josten, was a historian of science and Curator of the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford in England. In 1921 to 1929, Josten was educated by the Jesuits at Bad Godesberg in Germany. He studied for a year at the in Neuss, followed by studies at the University of Geneva, University of Freiburg, and University of Bonn. In 1934 Josten worked in the office of the then Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen, where he was involved in conservative plots to use the extensive powers of the aging President von Hindenburg - in particular his supreme command over the army - in order to stymie a complete grab of power by the Nazi members of the Government. When those aspirations came to a bloody end during the occupation of the Papen-Offices by the SS during the Night of the Long Knives on 30 June 1934, Josten scarcely managed to escape while his immediate superior Herbert von Bose was shot and other members of the Papen staff were arrested and taken to Lichtenburg Concentration Camp. In 1935 Josten achieved a doctorate in law from the, University of Erlangen. However, he gave up law due to disillusionment about the state of law in Germany under the Nazis. Also in 1935, he visited England, including Oxford. Jostem opposed Nazism from 1934 onwards and went into hiding in 1943 in Paris, France and then Bavaria in Germany. After World War II, he returned to England and eventually became a naturalized British citizen in 1954. In 1949, Josten achieved a major scholarly success while working at the Bodleian Library, Oxford University's main library. He discovered the code used by Elias Ashmole (the founder of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford) to encrypt his diaries. The decoded material was eventually published in 1966. Josten became Curator of the Museum of the History of Science at Oxford in 1950. He was an expert on the early history of chemistry (alchemy), astronomy, and early astronomical instruments. He expanded the museum's collection through purchases and the major gift of the private collection of the shipping owner, . This consisted of astronomical and mathematical instruments. It was built up with the help of Josten. On his early retirement in 1964 at the age of 52, he took an emeritus curatorial position at the museum. He encouraged his successor, Francis Maddison, who was previously an assistant curator at the museum. Kurt Josen was a member of Brasenose College, Oxford (also the college of Elias Ashmole) and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.He lived in rooms in St John Street in central Oxford. Josten married Constanze Josten in 1962. She died in 1968.
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