Emil
Adolf Behring was born on March 15, 1854 at Hansdorf, Deutsch-Eylau as the
eldest son of the second
marriage of a schoolmaster
with a total of 13 children.
Since the family could not afford to keep Emil at a University, he entered,
in 1874, the well-known Army Medical College at Berlin. This made his studies
financially practicable but also carried the obligation to stay in military
service for several years after he had taken his medical degree (1878) and passed
his State Examination (1880). He was then sent to Wohlau and Posen in Poland.
Besides much practical work he found in Posen time to study (at the Chemical
Department of the Experimental Station) problems connected with septic diseases.
In the years 1881-1883 he carried out important investigations on the action
of iodoform, stating that it does not kill microbes but may neutralize the poisons
given off by them, thus being antitoxic. His first publications on these questions
appeared in 1882. The governing body concerned with military health, which was
especially interested in the prevention and combating of epidemics, being aware
of the ability of Behring, sent him to the pharmacologist C. Binz at Bonn for
further training in experimental methods. In 1888 they ordered him back to Berlin,
where he worked-undoubtedly in full
agreement with his own wishes - as an assistant
at the Institute of Hygiene under Robert Koch. He remained there for several
years after 1889, and followed Koch when the latter moved to the Institute for Infectious Diseases. This appointment brought him into close association, not
only with Koch, but also with P. Ehrlich, who joined, in 1890, the brilliant
team of workers Koch had gathered round him. In 1894 Behring became Professor
of Hygiene at Halle, and the following year he moved to the corresponding chair
at Marburg.
Behring's most important researches were intimately bound up with the epoch-making
work of Pasteur, Koch, Ehrlich, Löffler, Roux, Yersin and others, which
led the foundation of our modern knowledge of the immunology of bacterial diseases;
but he is, himself, chiefly remembered for his work on diphtheria and on tuberculosis.
During the years 1888-1890 E. Roux and A. Yersin, working at the Pasteur Institute
in Paris, had shown that filtrates of
diphtheria cultures which contained no
bacilli, contained a substance which they called a toxin, that produced,
when injected into animals, all the symptoms of diphtheria. In 1890, L. Brieger
and C. Fraenkel prepared, from cultures
of diphtheria bacilli, a toxic substance,
which they called toxalbumin, which when injected in suitable doses into
guinea-pigs, immunized these animals to diphtheria.
Starting from his observations on the action of iodoform, Behring tried to find
whether a disinfection of the living organism might be obtained if animals were
injected with material that had been treated with various disinfectants. Above
all the experiments were performed with diphtheria and with tetanus bacilli.
They led to the well-known development of a new kind of therapy for these two
diseases. In 1890 Emil - Behring cartoons zoophilia von Behring cartoons - Behring zoophilia Emil von and S. Kitasato published their discovery that graduated
doses of sterilised brothcultures of diphtheria or of tetanus bacilli caused
the animals to produce, in their blood, substances which could neutralize the
toxins which these bacilli produced (antitoxins). They also showed that
the antitoxins thus produced by one animal could immunize another animal and
that it could cure an animal actually showing symptoms of diphtheria. This great
discovery was soon confirmed and successfully used by other workers.
Earlier in 1898, Behring and F. Wernicke had found that immunity to diphtheria
could be produced by the injection into animals of diphtheria toxin neutralized
by diphtheria antitoxin, and in 1907 Theobald Smith had suggested that such
toxin-antitoxin mixtures might be used to immunize man against this disease.
It was Behring, however, who
announced, in 1913, his production of a mixture
of this kind, and subsequent work
which modified and refined the mixture originally
produced by Behring resulted in the modern methods of immunization which have
largely banished diphtheria from the scourges of mankind. Behring himself saw
in his production of this toxin-antitoxin mixture the possibility of the final
eradication of diphtheria; and he regarded this part of his efforts as the crowning
success of his life's work.
From 1901 onwards Behring's health prevented him from giving regular lectures
and he devoted himself chiefly to the study of tuberculosis. To facilitate his
work a commercial firm in which he had a financial interest, built for him well-equipped
laboratories at Marburg and in 1914 he himself founded, also in Marburg, the
Behringwerke for the manufacture of sera and vaccines and for experimental work
on these. His association with the production of sera and vaccines made him
financially prosperous and he owned a large estate at Marburg, which was well
stocked with cattle which he used for experimental purposes.
The great majority of Behring's numerous
publications have been made easily
available in the editions of his Gesammelte Abhandlungen (Collected Papers)
in 1893 and 1915.
Numerous distinctions were conferred upon Behring. Already in 1893 the title
of Professor was conferred upon him, and two years later he became «Geheimer
Medizinalrat» and officer of the French Legion of Honour. In the ensuing
years followed honorary membership of
Societies in Italy, Turkey and France;
in 1901, the year of his Nobel Prize, he was raised to the nobility, and in
1903 he was elected to the Privy Council with the title of Excellency. Later
followed further honorary memberships in Hungary and Russia, as well as orders
and medals from Germany, Turkey and Roumania. He also became an honorary freeman
(Ehrenbürger) of Marburg.
In 1896 Behring married the 18 years old Else Spinola, daughter of the Director
of the Charité at Berlin. They had seven children. Behring died at Marburg
on March 31, 1917.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.