The Faculty for Chemistry and Pharmacy

The Faculty of Chemistry and Pharmacy at LMU Munich is one of the best in its field. It is part of the Grosshadern/Martinsried campus, a unique cluster of research institutions in the natural and life sciences in Europe - from discovery to application.

About us

Our faculty is located on the Campus Großhadern/Martinsried in Munich's Großhadern district.
It has a rich history and for several hundred years has stood for excellent research and teaching. In our three departments biochemistry, chemistry and pharmacy we research many relevant questions of the present and would like to make our contribution for a better society and a better future.

In teaching, we have always taken new, forward-looking paths. Recently, this has included the establishment of timely and needs-oriented new courses of study such as "Pharmaceutical Sciences" and the Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Chemistry. The Department of Chemistry also succeeded in establishing the Römer Foundation, which annually honors the best graduates and researchers at a graduation ceremony.

In addition to the many publications in excellent international journals and the numerous innovative patents of our research groups, our research successes include the founding of the Cluster of Excellence "Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich (CIPSM)," and currently the future cluster "Cluster for Nucleic Acid Therapeutics Munich (CNATM)," which brings together life scientists from various Munich research institutions and biotechnology companies to ultimately establish the Munich region as a globally visible melting pot for innovation, progress and teaching in the field of life sciences.

Members of the faculty have also received many internationally acclaimed awards. For example, the number of award winners in the Leibniz Program of the German Research Foundation DFG has increased to five faculty members. The faculty has also proactively initiated appointments as one of the first in Germany to bring back outstanding research personalities from the USA to Germany. In addition, the third-party funding ratio has always been kept high by DFG-funded Collaborative Research Centers in addition to other programs.

This is what it looks like

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Organisation

Boards, Committees, Representatives and Organisations

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History of our Faculty

1472

Foundation

Duke Ludwig IX, also known as Duke of Bavaria and Louis the Rich, founds the first "high school" in Bavaria, situated in Ingolstadt: The Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich (LMU) one of the Germany's oldest universities. Learn more

1800

Relocation

Prince-Elector Max IV Joseph of Bavaria (later on King Maximiliam the I) relocated the "high school" to Landshut. Learn more

1818

Johann Andreas Buchner, a Munich pharmacist, is appointed professor for pharmacy and pharmacology at the "high school" in Landshut. Learn more

1826

King Ludwig I of Bavaria orders the relocation of the university (which was later on named after Dutch Ludwig the Rich and King Maximilian I) from Landshut to Munich. Learn more

1852

Justus von Liebig, who was the most famous chemist at that time and who was formerly professor in Gießen, is appointed for the professorship of chemistry and receives a new building in the Sophienstraße and Arcisstaße. Among his doctoral students where to name a few: Friedrich August Kekule von Stradonitz, August Wilhelm von Hofmann, Emil Erlenmeyer and Adolph Strecker. Learn more

1870

The "Chemical Laboratory" under the direction of Adolf von Baeyer.

1875

Nobel Prize for Chemistry

Two years after the death of Liebig, Adolf von Baeyer is appointed full professor of chemistry. The institute, which receives in addition to the organic department an inorganic department, becomes the best known school for chemistry in Germany after an expansion under Baeyers management. In 1885 Baeyer is ennobled and in 1905 he receives the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for research about organic dyestuffs. Learn more

1877

To Baeyers working group belong a lot of students who later on were honored as eminent scientists, for example: Emil Fischer (Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry 1902), Eduard Buchner (Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry 1907), Richard Willstätter (Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry 1915) and Heinrich Wieland (Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry 1927).

1892

Albert Hilger

Chemistry and Pharmacy are shifted from the medical to the philosophical faculty. Albert Hilger from Erlangen, is appointed for the professorship for pharmaceutical chemistry and receives a new building for the institute in the Karlstraße. In 1894 an "Anstalt for Nahrungs- und Genussmittel" (institute for food and stimulates) is affiliated. Learn more

1893

Group picture of the members of the chemical institute. Besides the two Nobel Prize laureates Baeyer and Willstätter are pictured: Walter Dieckmann ("Dieckmann Condensation"), Johannes Thiele ("Thiele Hypothesis of Partial Valencies") and Victor Villiger ("Baeyer-Villiger Oxidation").

1905

Adolf von Baeyer receives the Nobel Prize fo Chemistry. Theodor Paul, student of Wilhelm Ostwald, overtakes the professorship for pharmaceutical chemistry. In 1916 a "Gerichtlich-Chemische Untersuchungsstelle"(judicial-chemical investigation department) and "Forschungsanstalt für Lebensmittelchemie" (research institute for food chemistry) are established.

1915

A. v. Baeyer resigns. Richard Willstätter, a student of Baeyer and head of the Kaiser-Willhelm-Institute for Chemistry in Berlin, is appointed full professor of chemistry of the "Chemical Laboratory of the State". In the same year, Willstätter receives the Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1915 for research about vegetable dyes. The chemical institute is extended and modernized. Learn more

1926

Heinrich Wieland becomes Willstätters successor. He is a student of Baeyer and head of the chemical institute in Freiburg. In 1927 Wieland receives the Nobel Prize for Chemistry because of his research about bile acids. Learn more

1932

Kasimir Fajans, born in Warshaw, becomes head of the Institute of Physical Chemistry at the Sophienstraße, which was built with the aid of the Rockefeller Foundation. As he is Jewish, he is dismissed and denaturalized in 1936. Learn more

1935

A pharmacognostic instiute ("Institute for pharmaceutical pharmacology”) is established in the Karlstraße.

1950

Heinrich Wieland is given emeritus status. Until 1953, four professorships are established and staffed: Georg-Maria Schwab (physical chemistry), Egon Wiberg (inorganic chemistry), Rolf Huisgen (organic chemistry, Wieland student, later on most quoted german chemist) and Feodor Lynen (biochemistry, he won the Nobel Prize in 1964) who also overtakes the management of the Max-Planck Institute for Cell Chemistry. Learn more

1954

1954-1959: Between Karlstraße and Sophiestraße four new institutes are built (organic, inorganic, physical chemistry and biochemistry). In addition, new buildings are being constructed there for the "Institute of Pharmacy and Food Chemistry" and the "Institute of Pharmaceutical Drug Science".

1964

Feodor Lynen receives the Nobel Prize in Medicine

1973

Ernst Otto Fischer receives the Nobel Prize in Chemistry Ernst Otto Fischer was as professor part of the LMU Chemistry faculty from 1959-1964. Learn more

1999

1999-2004: The faculty for chemistry and pharmacy moves to the "HighTech CampusLMU” at the western end of Munich. A Department for Chemistry and Biochemistry with the teaching fields anorganic, organic and physical chemistry and biochemistry is established. In addition, a Department for Pharmacy – Center for Pharmacy Research with the teaching fields pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmaceutical biology, pharmaceutical technology and biopharmacy as well as pharmacology for natural sciences is set up.

2007

Chemistry Nobel Prize for Gerhard Ertl (1973 - 1986 member of the Faculty of Chemistry and Pharmacy of the LMU) Learn more

2016

Opening of the new research building "Center for Molecular Biosystems" BioSysM.

2021

Opening of the new research building "Institute for Chemical Epigenetics" ICEM.

ChemART - Art Work at our campus

Two-part steel sculpture by James Reineking. The circular piazza in Lucca from the 18th century, which is surrounded by houses and was created on the site of an ancient, formerly oval amphitheater, served as his starting point.

Building A - Gene Center

© Jan Greune

Building A - Gene Center

Yoshiyuki Miura: "Vibrations of Space" in the entrance hall of House C (90.000 EUR). A spherical triangle is formed from a multitude of stone pillars made of black African granite (total weight approx. 500 kg) according to a precisely calculated system.

Julia Mangold: Steel sculpture in the entrance hall of House D (31.565 EUR). The block lying on the floor with a diagonal of 6x2 m length functions as a central resting point and as a meeting place.

Julia Mangold: Stele and three-color mural in the entrance hall House E (9.416 EUR). The sculpture builds a bridge to the one in House D.

Afra Dopfer: Wall relief in the entrance hall of House F (78.110 EUR). Her sculptures adapt to the given architecture with mathematical precision and are not easily recognizable as such at first glance. On the two 8 m high walls, the imprint of an imaginary sphere with a diameter of 50 m is realized in an extremely flat work.

Statue of Baeyer

The circular spatial sculpture "Ring" by the brothers Maik and Dirk Lübbert cuts through the air space between the two foyers and continues in the flooring of the cafeteria and the upper foyer. The interrupted granite ring is 60 cm wide with a diameter of 11 m.

Artists' collective Viola Relle and Raphael Weilguni: "Archaeology of the Future" - Artwork in front of ICEM and BioSys