Johann Georg Noel Dragendorff (April 20, 1836 – April 7, 1898 in Rostock) was a German pharmacist and chemist born in Rostock, today Germany, formerly Prussia.
He passed the pharmacy exam at the University of Rostock in 1858. He continued his studies at the universities of Rostock and Heidelberg. His father, Ludwig, was a practicing physician and occasionally gave lectures at the University of Rostock. In 1853, Dragendorff began his apprenticeship as a pharmacist at the Witte family's Hirsch pharmacy. In 1856, he successfully passed the pharmacy exam and worked for a time at the Witte pharmacy. He then moved to the court pharmacy in Doberan (a city in northwest Germany) and opened a branch in Heiligendamm. In 1861, he defended his doctorate with the dissertation "Effects of phosphorus on some carbonic and boric compounds with acid salt." Dragendorff gained research experience in the fields of plant analysis, plant physiology, and agrochemistry while working as an assistant in the laboratory of Franz Schultze, professor at the University of Rostock, from 1860 to 1862. In 1862, he was invited to edit the journal "Pharmaceutische Zeitschrift für Russland" of the Herbal Society of St. Petersburg. There he continued his pedagogical training, teaching pharmacy and pharmacognosy to pharmacy students in St. Petersburg. In May 1864, Dragendorff passed his master's examinations and graduated in pharmacy from the University of Tartu (Dorpat) in September of the same year. He obtained his master's degree for his thesis "Chemistry and the Study of Fungi on White Birch and Related Species." From 1864 to 1894, he was director of the Institute of Pharmacy at the University of Tartu and a professor. In 1872 he was awarded an honorary doctorate in medicine from the University of Munich. From 1882 to 1887, he was vice-rector of the University of Tartu and, from 1890 to 1892, dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He was president of the Estonian Society of Naturalists from 1890 to 1893. He published research in the fields of forensic chemistry, pharmacognosy, food analysis, environmental chemistry, pharmacology, toxicology, and others. After thirty years of work in Tartu (today Estonia, then part of the Russian Empire), Dragendorff returned to Rostock in 1894, where he died of heart disease on April 7, 1898. Dragendorff was buried in his hometown; his grave is covered by a four-meter-high obelisk of black granite. His Russian students raised funds for a memorial tablet on his grave. The remains of this tablet are now in Linden Park. On his obelisk, one can read the inscription: "Seine dankbaren schüler in russland" (Your grateful students in Russia). He earned his doctorate in philosophy from the University of Rostock in 1861.
He received the Hanbury Medal in 1885.
His name is associated with Dragendorff's reagent, which is a solution of potassium bismuth iodide used to ascertain the presence of alkaloids. Dragendorff's test is a qualitative test formerly used for bile.