Abstract

In the beginning of the year 1884 Beijerinck was an ambitious young botanist who had already attracted world-wide attention by his fundamental contributions to cecidology. Moreover his position as a professor at the Agricultural College of Wageningen seemed to offer many prospects for a harmonious development of his botanical career. In previous years he had devoted himself chiefly to hybridisation experiments on cereals, and there were signs of a growing realization by the educational authorities of the importance of such investigations.

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