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BECHER, bĕk'ẽr, Johann Joachim (1635-82). A German chemist, born at Speyer. He acquired an extensive knowledge of medicine, physics, chemistry, and economics; then taught and practiced medicine at Mainz. Later he founded a chemical laboratory at Munich, and in 1660 he was called to Vienna to inaugurate extensive commercial and industrial establishments. Becher had many enemies, and was accused not altogether unjustly of charlatanry. In his Physica Subterranea (1669), we find the first clear mention of the imaginary fiery principle (terra pinguis). which afterwards, under the name of phlogiston, played so important a role in chemical theory. Consult Erdberg-Krezenciewski, Johann Joachim Becker (Jena, 1896).

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