Background
He was the son of a Russian noble family and grew up in the Russian Empire.
biochemist biophysicist chemist university professor
He was the son of a Russian noble family and grew up in the Russian Empire.
He studied physics at the University of Kiev from 1912, and obtained a doctorate there in 1918.
He served as Rector of the Goethe University Frankfurt from 1949 to 1951. He moved to Germany in 1922 and became a German citizen in 1927. He became the assistant of Friedrich Dessauer and obtained an additional doctorate at the Goethe University in 1929.
In 1934 he became Professor of Physics at the Goethe University, and in 1943 he became Pro-Rector of the university.
He served as the university"s Rector 1949–1951 and again as Pro-Rector 1951–1954. From 1946 he was chairman of the scientific council of the Max Planck Society, and in 1955, he became an adviser to the German Atomic Commission, a body of experts appointed by the federal government.
He was the father of the noted cell biologist and cancer researcher Manfred F. Rajewsky (1934–2013), of the noted immunologist Klaus Rajewsky (b 1936), and of the sociologist Xenia Julia Maria Rajewsky (1939–2011). H. in: Biophysik 10, 3-5 (1973).
Honorary doctorates at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Giessen, the University of Hanover, the University of Innsbruck, the University of Naples and the University of Turin Member of the Scientific Society (Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft) at the Goethe University Frankfurt (from 1955 to 1970 as President) Faculty Medal of the Faculty of Natural Sciences, Goethe University Frankfurt Gold Medal of the Sapienza University of Rome Fellow of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina Goethe Plaque of the city of Frankfurt, 1951 Commander"s Cross (Großes Verdienstkreuz) of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, 1953 Goethe Plaque of the State of Hesse, 1958 Academia Medica in Rome, 1959 Sigillum Magnum of the University of Bologna, 1962 Knight Commander"s Cross (Großes Verdienstkreuz mit Stern) of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, 1963 Lenin Medal in Gold.
However, he later maintained that he had always been an opponent of national socialism.
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina]
He was a member of the Nazi Party from 1937 to 1945. Member of the Scientific Society (Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft) at the Goethe University Frankfurt (from 1955 to 1970 as President).