Abstract

Erich von Tschermak-Seysenegg is mostly remembered – together with Hugo de Vries and Carl Correns – for ‘rediscovering’ Mendel’s laws in 1900–01. The ‘rediscovery’ marks the constitutional period of modern genetics. Although his role was doubted in several times as less significant, the newest facts show that he – especially in cooperation with his older brother Armin – vastly contributed to the interpretation of triple and parallel ‘rediscovery’. After 1900–01, his main contribution laid in the area of practical plant breeding.

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