Rudolf Weigl Net Worth, Age, Height, Relationship Status

                                                    Rudolf Weigl is a Polish biologist and inventor. He is best known for inventing the first effective typhoid vaccine. Weigl was instrumental in saving countless Jews during the Holocaust by inventing the typhoid vaccine. Rudolf Weigl's estate is not available and is under review.
Full Name Rudolf Weigl
Birth Date 2 September 1883
Birth Place Prerau, Austria-Hungary
Profession Biologist, Physician, Inventor
Partner Zofia Weigl
Net Worth Under Review
Died 11 August 1957

Early life

Rudolf Weigl was born on September 2, 1883 in Prerau, Austria-Hungary. He was born into an Austrian family. Rudolf lost his father in a bicycle accident. Then his mother, Elisabeth Crozel, married a Polish teacher, Józef Troinar. He grew up in Jaslo, Poland.

Regarding his education, he graduated from Lviv University in 1907. While studying at the university, he became a student of professors J. Nusbaum Hilarowicz and Benedikt Dybowski. Weigl began working as an assistant to Professor Nusbaum. After a while, he got his doctorate in zoology, histology and comparative anatomy.

Rudolf Wegl’s Net Worth and Career

In 1914, during World War I, Rudolf was called up for medical service in the Austro-Hungarian army. During this time, he began to research typhus and its underlying causes. For two years, from 1981 to 1920, he served in a military hospital, where he worked intensively on typhus in a laboratory specially created for the study of typhus.

Weigl became a member of the staff of the Military Medical Council of the Polish Army in 1919. He continued his research and experiments with typhoid fever, eventually inventing a vaccine. Weigl continued his research even after Germany invaded Poland in 1939. While working at the Lviv Institute, he increased the production of typhoid vaccines.

Weigl spent four years in Lviv, where he focused exclusively on vaccine research and development. At that time, he was also managing and directing the Typhus and Virus Research Institute. While searching for him, he finally found a typhoid vaccine.

Rudolph recruited and housed some 2,000 Polish intellectuals, Jews, and other members of the Polish resistance after starting a typhoid vaccine factory in his own institution. The Jewish workers who helped him obtain the typhoid vaccine were given lodging, food, and doses of the vaccine in return. During the Nazi regime he managed to save the lives of about 5,000 people.

Weigl was president of the General Institute of Microbiology after moving to Krakow in southern Poland. Later, he also headed the Department of Biology at the Faculty of Medicine. In 1951 Weigl finally retired. Although the vaccine was discontinued, it continued to be produced continuously for several years until it was discontinued.

Personal life of Rudolf Weigl

Weigl was reportedly married to Zofia Weigl, who began a scientific collaboration with him. Rudolf and Zofia were married in 1921. Zofia was also one of his closest associates when he worked at the Spotted Typhus Research Institute.

Rudolf Weigl died on August 11, 1957 at the age of 73. He breathed his last in the Polish mountain town of Zakopane. His body was buried in the historical Rakovitska necropolis in Karkov.

Weigl was awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations in 2003. Recently, on September 2, 2021, Google celebrated Weigl’s 138th birthday with a Google Doodle.

Rudolf Wegl net worth

Rudolf Weigl Net worth is currently not available. However, some websites claim that his net worth is between $1 million and $2 million. Through his research work and many years of work as a biologist, he must have achieved a lot.