She was the first woman admitted to study at the University of Tübingen,[2] and became one of the first women in Germany to be given the academic title of “Professor”. She patented a type of bandage and won a prize for her research on butterfly wings.[3] She was driven from office due to the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany.[2]
She continued her study of math and physics, and wrote papers on natural history as she learned about Lamarckian evolution from the zoologist Theodor Eimer. Under Eimer's guidance, she completed her thesis in 1895; the subject of the thesis was how the evolution of snails led to the development of their shells. She was awarded a doctorate in Natural Science and worked as an assistant to Eimer until he died in 1898.[5]
In 1903, Linden was awarded the Da Gama Machado prize for her research into the development of colour in butterfly wings.[7]
In 1908, she was appointed to lead the new Institute of Parasitology at the University of Bonn.[8] She researched the causes and symptoms of tuberculosis and other lung diseases. She believed that copper might provide therapy for tuberculosis. While in Bonn, she took Frau von Altenburg as her companion. Linden became the first woman[9] (or one of the first[5]) to be made a titular professor in Germany in 1910, despite the disapproval of the Prussian Ministry of Education. Despite this rank, she was not allowed to teach.
Linden received a patent for her discovery that copper salts could be used as a disinfectant. She later worked with the Hartmann Group to incorporate copper salts into their bandaging products.[9]
In 1928, her position at the university was downgraded to ‘assistant’.
Linden’s opposition to the Nazification of Germany meant that she was forced to leave her job.[10] In 1933, she and Frau von Altenburg emigrated to Liechtenstein.[9]
In 1999, a secondary school in Calw was named after her: the Maria-von-Linden-Gymnasium, a science-oriented grammar school.
In 2021, the University of Tübingen established the annual Maria von Linden Lecture, to promote women in life sciences.[12]
Also known as
Linden may also be known as: Maria Countess von Linden; Maria Gräfin von Linden; Maria Gräfin von Linden-Aspermont; Maria von Linden-Aspermont; or Linden-Aspermont.
^Wanger, Thomas Ernst (31 December 2011). "Wartensleben, Gabriele Gräfin von". Historisches Lexikon des Fürstentums Liechtenstein online (eHLFL) (in German). Retrieved 4 January 2023.