| Gottfried Christoph Beireis | |
|---|---|
| .jpg.webp) Gottfried Christoph Beireis | |
| Born | 2 March 1730 Free imperial city of Mühlhausen, Holy Roman Empire | 
| Died | 18 September 1809 (aged 79) | 
| Nationality | German | 
| Alma mater | University of Helmstedt | 
| Known for | Production of cinnabar red dye | 
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Physicist, chemist, and physician | 
| Institutions | University of Helmstedt | 
| Doctoral advisor | Lorenz Heister | 
| Other academic advisors | Georg Erhardt Hamberger | 
| Doctoral students | Christian Heinrich Bünger | 
Gottfried Christoph Beireis (2 March 1730 – 18 September 1809) was a German chemist and doctor. He was also a collector of curiosities who rescued some of Jacques de Vaucanson's automata.[1]
Biography
Beireis was born in Mühlhausen. He taught anatomy, medicine, surgery, chemistry, botany, natural history, pharmacy, mineralogy, metallurgy, agriculture, forestry, music, painting, and numismatics.
As a student, he discovered a way to convert ammonium sulfide to cinnabar and made a fortune selling the latter as a red dye.
Beireis was a student of Georg Erhardt Hamberger's in Jena in 1753. Beireis became a professor in 1759 without having obtained his MD degree; the degree was awarded subsequently for work done at Helmstadt under Lorenz Heister between 1756 and 1759.
He died in Helmstedt.
References
External links