Infecundin
The name of the first contraceptive pill of Richter in 1966 is Infecundin.
Ludwig Haberlandt, an Austrian physiologist, he developed a preparation called “Infecundin®” with the Gedeon Richter company in Budapest in 1930, and clinical trials began shortly afterwards. Due to his early suicide on July 22, 1932 and the chaos of war in Europe, all discussions about the realization of hormonal contraception entered a long hiatus. The name “Infecundin” survived. In 1966, it became the trade name of the first oral contraceptive produced in Hungary by the Gedeon Richter company.
Subsequently, Richter launched its first second-generation product under the name Bisecurin in 1970.