Paul Sorrells

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By this time the German chemical and electrical industries had grown to become European and indeed world leaders, leaving their British counterparts far behind. Part of the reason was their employment of trained scientists – 230 in BASF, for example, or 165 in Hoechst, another major chemical firm – reflecting the greater concentration of state-funded German universities on the sciences.
The Pursuit of Power: Europe 1815–1914 (The Penguin History of Europe Book 7)
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