Ernst David Bergmann was born in
Germany, His father, Judah Bergmann, was a
rabbi. He studied chemistry at the
University of Berlin under
Wilhelm Schlenk. He was awarded his Ph.D. in 1927. Bergmann continued to work at the university and wrote the "Comprehensive Manual of Organic Chemistry" (
Ausführliches Lehrbuch der Organischen Chemie) together with Schlenk. The two-volume manual was published in 1932 and 1939, respectively; however, because Bergmann was Jewish his name to be removed from the title page of the second volume. Bergmann left for London in 1933 soon after the
Nazis came to power, and began work with chemist and Zionist leader
Chaim Weizmann. He turned down an offer of a position at
Oxford from Sir
Robert Robinson, an event that Robinson recalled years later with anger. Bergmann left Europe less than a year later. He
emigrated to
Mandatory Palestine on January 1, 1934, to work at the Daniel Sieff Research Institute in
Rehovot. During World War II he worked on defense projects for the French, British, and Americans. A year after the war, Bergmann returned to Sieff Institute, which went on to become the
Weizmann Institute of Science. Bergmann was married to the chemist Ottilie Blum. ==Scientific career==