Albert Schinzinger (doctor)

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Albert Schinzinger (born February 2, 1827 in Freiburg im Breisgau ; † July 24, 1911 there ) was a German surgeon and university professor.

Life

Schinzinger came from an old Freiburg family. The professor of church history Joseph Anton Schinzinger was his great-uncle. Albert Schinzinger studied at the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg and the University of Vienna . In 1847 he became a member of the Corps Suevia Freiburg . He fought in the Baden Revolution . As a student of Louis Stromeyer , he received his doctorate in 1850 . Habilitated since 1853 , he became associate professor in 1860 . During the Franco-Prussian War he headed the large reserve hospital in Schwetzingen . In 1871 he became chair of surgery . From 1872 he headed the private surgical clinic in the mother house of the Sisters of Mercy in Freiburg im Breisgau. Schinzinger was the first physician to the ovariectomy for reducing the risk of breast cancer stimulated (1889).

family

Albert Schinzinger was married to Anne Josefa nee Schalke (1832–1874). Due to the activity of the head of the family, the family lived in Freiburg. The marriage resulted in 2 daughters and 4 sons. Among them was the eldest son Albert Schinzinger (1856–1926), who lived in Japan for many years and was appointed Consul General for Japan. The youngest son was Robert (born 1865), whose son Robert received a professorship in Japan in 1923.

Honors

Street sign in Freiburg

Works

  • The Complex Dislocations (1858) digitized
  • Communications from the field of dislocations and fractures , Prussian quarterly journal 1862 and 1865
  • The reserve hospital Schwezingen (1871)
  • The iodoform treatment (1883)
  • Communications from the field of dislocations and fractures (1896).

Otherwise he wrote about injuries to the calcaneus , interventions on the thyroid gland , dislocations and resections .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul Schumacher, in: Badische Biographien NF 4, 261 f. (online at Schinzinger, Albert at leo-bw.de (as of November 3, 2016)).
  2. Kösener corps lists 1910, 48/176.