Walther Otto Ernst Friedrich was born in to the family of an engineer who encouraged him to study technical sciences from childhood. He graduated from high school in Aschersleben, where he did well in mathematics and physics, and also became interested in music, learning to play the violin, but showed no inclination for languages or history. In 1905, he entered the
Geneva Academy to study music and physics, but soon interrupted his music studies. In 1911, he received a doctorate in physics from the
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, where he had previously studied for six years, having transferred there from Geneva, for his research on X-ray radiation. From 1912 to 1914, he worked at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München as an assistant to
Max von Laue, and in 1914 he became a radiologist at the university hospital in Freiburg; Three years later, he became a
Privatdozent of physics at the
University of Freiburg, and in 1921, he became a professor of physics, at the same time becoming interested in the application of physics in medicine. In 1922, he lectured in Granada, Spain, as a visiting professor. From 1923, Friedrich was a professor of medical physics at the
Friedrich Wilhelm University of Berlin and in the same year he simultaneously headed the Institute for Radiation Research at the university, which he headed until 1945l. In 1929, he was appointed dean of the medical faculty of this university, having headed the German Radiological Society a year earlier. During the
Nazi period, he continued his scientific work at the university and various scientific societies. According to East German sources, he helped two of his Jewish colleagues avoid deportation to camps. == References ==