Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Johann Peter Süssmilch





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





Johann Peter SüßmilchorSüssmilch (September 3, 1707 in Zehlendorf – March 22, 1767 in Berlin) was a German Protestant pastor, statistician and demographer.

Berlin memorial plaque, Berlin-Mitte (Brüderstr. 10)

Education and career

edit

Süßmilch studied medicine and theologyatJena and Halle and in 1741 was an army chaplain in the First Silesian War. On Sunday, 13 August 1741, the former field preacher gave his inaugural sermon as pastor of the community Etzin.[1] In 1742 he took a post as Provost in the St. Petri parish in Berlin-Cölln. He became a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences in 1745. He conversed with Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Immanuel Kant.

Süßmilch's most important publication on The Divine order in the circumstances of the human sex, birth, death and reproduction, which he wrote in 1741, is regarded as a seminal and pioneering work in demography and the history of population statistics. Süssmilch discovered that, in the long term, there is a constant sex ratio of 1,000 female births to 1,050 male births. He saw this as a proof of the Divine working in this World. Due to this work, he can be regarded as one of the founding fathers of demography in Germany. However, he refers in his work to Caspar Neumann's work, who calculated a monthly statistics of deaths by age and death cause already between 1687 and 1691 in Breslau (present-day Wrocław). Süssmilch also worked on life tables.

Works

edit
 
Göttliche Ordnung, 1761

References

edit
edit

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Johann_Peter_Süssmilch&oldid=1195632923"
 



Last edited on 14 January 2024, at 17:31  





Languages

 


Deutsch
Español
Euskara
Français

Italiano
مصرى

Português
Русский
Svenska
 

Wikipedia


This page was last edited on 14 January 2024, at 17:31 (UTC).

Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



Privacy policy

About Wikipedia

Disclaimers

Contact Wikipedia

Code of Conduct

Developers

Statistics

Cookie statement

Terms of Use

Desktop