Born 15 October 1849 in
Hirschberg, Thuringia, the son of a factory owner, he was educated by private tutors and at school at
Ebersdorf until 1864. After attending a trade school in
Hof, Bavaria from 1864–1866, he studied mechanical engineering and zoology at the Polytechnikum
Nuremberg from 1867–1870. There he lived in the former house of engraver and botanist
Jacob Sturm and was inspired to study biology by Sturm's natural history collections. he was appointed inspector of the Natural History Cabinet in
Darmstadt and began lectureship in zoology at the Polytechnikum Darmstadt. After the Polytechnikum became the Technische Hochschule, he was appointed as professor on 18 October 1877. In 1880, he became founding member of the Darmstadt Association for Natural Sciences (Naturwissenschaftlicher Verein zu Darmstadt). In addition to his teaching positions, he became the zoological curator of the Landesmuseum on 20.12.1890, which succeeded the Natural history Cabinet. During his Darmstadt years, he visited the
Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn (1891 Description of Cereopsis studeri Koch) again, visited artist and museums, and worked in sculptor
Adolf von Hildebrand's atelier in
Florence, visiting
Carrara to select marble for his own works. together with teacher Heinrich Jung and Dr Friedrich Quentell. He was involved in planning the
Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt, which opened in 1906 and resigned from his teaching duties in 1905. Here he pioneered the idea of zoological dioramas for exhibiting taxidermy specimens. Instead of having specimens in cabinets, he had them arranged against a backdrop with natural-looking environment. Groups of animals forming zoogeographic associations were placed together. Many of these dioramas were damaged in World War II. Gottlieb von Koch died 1914,
Alsbach, Germany. The bird species
Mindanao cuckooshrike (
Coracina striata kochi) and
Whiskered Pitta (
Erythropitta kochi) are named after von Koch. == Publications ==