Hans Mottek was one of the most important economic historians of the DDR.
Life
Mottek was born into a Jewish family and received a humanistic education. From 1929 to 1932, he studied jurisprudence at the Universities of Freiburg and Berlin. In 1932/33 he was a legal clerk at the. After the Nazi seizure of power, Mottek had to abandon the professional career which he had only just begun. In the same year, he emigrated to Mandatory Palestine. In 1935, Mottek joined the Communist Party of Germany. Subsequently, he lived in Great Britain from 1936 to 1946, where he made his living as an agricultural worker. There he was a founding member of the Free German Youth. In 1946 he returned to Germany and became a jurist in the central administration for labour and social welfare in Berlin. From 1947 he expanded into the field of academia as an economic historian and he achieved his doctorate in 1950 at the University of Berlin for his dissertation, Die Ursachen der preußischen Eisenbahnverstaatlichung des Jahres 1879 und die Vorbedingungen ihres Erfolges. His first post at the paedogogical high school of Greater Berlin was followed in Autumn 1950 by an appointment at the newly founded in Karlshorst in the seminar for economic history, where he remained for four years and established his own school of economic history. In 1951, he became a Docent, then an ordinary professor in 1952. After that, from 1952 until his retirement in 1975, he was director of the Institute of Economic History at the HfÖ. He became a corresponding member of the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin in 1969 and an ordinary member in 1971. From 1971 until 1974 he was the leader of the commission for environmental research at the AdW.
Work
Between 1957 and 1974 Mottek's masterpiece, the three volumeWirtschaftgeschichte Deutschlands was produced in close connection with his teaching. This foundation stone of the study of German economic history quickly found recognition in Germany and internationally. Mottek passed his special interest in the Industrialisation of the 19th century to his students, who produced several works n the history of the industrial revolution in Germany, with his encouragement and direction. Among these scholars were Lothar Baar, Walter Becker and. Mottek researched and wrote particularly on the problem of economic crises, on stagnation and growth in economic history and on means of accelerating economic growth in the past and present. Mottek, who never abandoned Marxism, entered a new field in the 1970s: the research of issues of the relationship between humanity and the environment. He no longer produced research in other fields of economic history in the face of his growing concern with the global problems of humanity and its future in the face of impending ecological catastrophe.
*Volume 2: Von der Zeit der Französischen Revolution bis zur Zeit der Bismarkschen Reichsgründung. Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin 1964.
*Volume 3: Von der Zeit der Bismarckschen Reichsgründung 1871 bis zur Niederlage des faschistischen deutschen Imperialismus 1945 . Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin 1974.
Gesellschaft und Umwelt. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1976.
Theoretisch-historische Betrachtungen zum Problem der ökonomischen Krisen im Kapitalismus. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1978.
Die Krisen und die Entwicklung des Kapitalismus. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1982.
Zu den Entwicklungsgesetzmäßigkeiten des kapitalistischen Geldsystems. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1982.
Die 70er Jahre. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1984.
Entwicklungstendenzen der staatsmonopolistischen Regulierung nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1988.
Wirtschaftsgeschichte und Umwelt. BdWi-Verlag, Marburg 1996.
: Studien zur Geschichte der industriellen Revolution in Deutschland. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1960.
Articles
"Zum Problem Stagnation und Wachstum in der Wirtschaftsgeschichte." Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, pp. 151–l70.
"Zu einigen Grundfragen der Mensch-Umwelt-Problematik." Wirtschaftswissenschaften 20, pp. 36–42.
"Wirtschaftsgeschichte und Umwelt." Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, pp. 77–82.