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・ Friedrich Ueberweg
・ Friedrich Uhde
・ Friedrich Ulfers
・ Friedrich Ulmer
・ Friedrich van Hulsen
・ Friedrich Vierhapper
・ Friedrich Vieweg
・ Friedrich Pützer
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・ Friedrich Radszuweit
・ Friedrich Rainer
・ Friedrich Ramm
・ Friedrich Ranke
・ Friedrich Raschig
・ Friedrich Rathgen
Friedrich Ratzel
・ Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen
・ Friedrich Rehberg
・ Friedrich Reindel
・ Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald
・ Friedrich Reinitzer
・ Friedrich Reusch
・ Friedrich Richard Petri
・ Friedrich Richter
・ Friedrich Richter (officer)
・ Friedrich Ris
・ Friedrich Risner
・ Friedrich Rittelmeyer
・ Friedrich Ritter
・ Friedrich Ritter von Friedländer-Malheim


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Friedrich Ratzel : ウィキペディア英語版
Friedrich Ratzel

Friedrich Ratzel (August 30, 1844, Karlsruhe, Baden – August 9, 1904, Ammerland) was a German geographer and ethnographer, notable for first using the term ''Lebensraum'' ("living space") in the sense that the National Socialists later would.
==Life==
Ratzel's father was the head of the household staff of the Grand Duke of Baden. He attended high school in Karlsruhe for six years before being apprenticed at age 15 to apothecaries . In 1863, he went to Rapperswil on the Lake of Zurich, Switzerland, where he began to study the classics. After a further year as an apothecary at Moers near Krefeld in the Ruhr area (1865–1866), he spent a short time at the high school in Karlsruhe and became a student of zoology at the universities of Heidelberg, Jena and Berlin, finishing in 1868. He studied zoology in 1869, publishing ''Sein und Werden der organischen Welt'' on Darwin.
After the completion of his schooling, Ratzel began a period of travels that saw him transform from zoologist/biologist to geographer. He began field work in the Mediterranean, writing letters of his experiences. These letters led to a job as a traveling reporter for the ''Kölnische Zeitung'' ("Cologne Journal"), which provided him the means for further travel. Ratzel embarked on several expeditions, the lengthiest and most important being his 1874-1875 trip to North America, Cuba, and Mexico. This trip was a turning point in Ratzel’s career. He studied the influence of people of German origin in America, especially in the Midwest, as well as other ethnic groups in North America.
He produced a written work of his account in 1876, ''Städte-und Kulturbilder aus Nordamerika'' (Profile of Cities and Cultures in North America), which would help establish the field of cultural geography. According to Ratzel, cities are the best place to study people because life is "blended, compressed, and accelerated" in cities, and they bring out the "greatest, best, most typical aspects of people". Ratzel had traveled to cities such as New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Richmond, Charleston, New Orleans, and San Francisco.
Upon his return in 1875, Ratzel became a lecturer in geography at the Technical High School in Munich. In 1876, he was promoted to assistant professor, then rose to full professor in 1880. While at Munich, Ratzel produced several books and established his career as an academic. In 1886, he accepted an appointment at Leipzig. His lectures were widely attended, notably by the influential American geographer Ellen Churchill Semple.
Ratzel produced the foundations of human geography in his two-volume ''Anthropogeographie'' in 1882 and 1891. This work was misinterpreted by many of his students, creating a number of environmental determinists. He published his work on political geography, ''Politische Geographie'', in 1897. It was in this work that Ratzel introduced concepts that contributed to Lebensraum and Social Darwinism. His three volume work ''The History of Mankind''〔(The History of Mankind ) by Professor Friedrich Ratzel, MacMillan and Co., Ltd., published 1896〕 was published in English in 1896 and contained over 1100 excellent engravings and remarkable chromolithography.
Ratzel continued his work at Leipzig until his sudden death on August 9, 1904 in Ammerland, Germany.
Ratzel, a scholar of versatile academic interest, was a staunch German. During the outbreak of Franco-Prussian war in 1870, he joined the Prussian army and was wounded twice during the war.

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