In 1873 Haberlandt first became interested in soybeans when he obtained the seeds of 19 soybean varieties at the
Vienna World Exposition (Wiener Weltausstellung). At the time he was a professor at the Imperial-Royal College of Agriculture (
k.k. Hochschule für Bodencultur) in Vienna. He cultivated these seeds in
Vienna, and soon began to distribute them throughout Central and Western Europe. Most of the farmers who received seeds from him cultivated them, then reported their results back to him. Starting in Feb. 1876, he published these results first in various journal articles, and finally in his magnum opus,
Die Sojabohne in 1878. A biography of Friedrich Haberlandt and his work with soybeans (129 pages, 169 references) is now available online. He died in 1878, at age 52, in the prime of his life. His untimely and premature death probably set back the interest in soybeans in
Europe by at least 50 years. ==References==