Arnold Lungershausen (veterinarian)

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Arnold Lungershausen (* around 1836 ; † March 1, 1907 in Bückeburg ) was a German pharmacist , veterinarian and veterinary councilor .

Life

family

Arnold Lungershausen came from an old family of officers. His father, Jacob Lungershausen , was a Schaumburg-Lippischer major and commander of the Wilhelmstein Fortress .

Lungershausen's eldest son was Carl Ludwig Arnold Lungershausen, born on September 25, 1865 in Bückeburg. He emigrated to America on September 8, 1885 . His emigrant files have been preserved in the Bückeburg city archive .

Career

After graduating from school, Lungershausen initially trained as a pharmacist, a profession that he practiced for a total of eight years. Then he graduated from veterinary medicine. During this period he observed the sheeppox disease that occurred in the area around Hanover in 1862 and 1863 , which he reported more than four decades later during a similar outbreak in 1906 in the Deutsche Tierärztliche Wochenschrift . Also in 1863, at the end of his studies, Lungershausen received his veterinary state examination, which was rated “good”. As a result, he settled as a practical veterinarian in Bückeburg, the capital of what was then the principality of Schaumburg-Lippe .

Soon after his establishment, the then sovereign, Prince Adolf I. Georg , appointed the veterinarian as Princely Horse Doctor and State Veterinarian. In 1891 Lungershausen employed the of University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover examinerten Arnold Grimme as his intern. In 1893 he married Lilli Lungershausen; the marriage resulted in four daughters.

The princely stables and state veterinarian of Schaumburg-Lippe was also asked as an expert . For example, on December 3, 1893, he responded to an inquiry as the “Princely State Heretic”, the text of which became part of a collection that had been published several times and which the Jewish scholar and lecturer Hirsch Hildesheimer published in a second edition in 1906. Lungershausen's text then also served - as a one-sidedly negatively falsified " quote " - the trade council and co-founder of the Association of Animal Welfare Associations of the German Reich , Ernst von Schwartz , in his book "The anesthetic slaughter of the Israelites ..." naming the incorrectly reproduced author as agitation against the religious ritual slaughter of the Jews.

By 1895 at the latest, Arnold Lungershausen was a Freemason member of the Bückeburg Lodge Hermine zum Nesselblatt . He died in 1901 at the age of 72.

The Schaumburg-Lippe vet was a participant of from 7 to 12 August 1899 in Baden-Baden organized Seventh International Veterinary Congress - as well as the in Coburg reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gothaische country vet Hugo Lungershausen .

After the turn of the century, Prince Georg Lungershausen was promoted to veterinary council in 1906. The "Thiervogt" was a member of the General Veterinary Association , at whose meeting the officer regularly attended. He earned services as a princely stables veterinarian and state veterinarian and was particularly involved in animal breeding in his home country.

Fonts (selection)

  • Memories of young people, concerning sheeppox , in: Deutsche Tierärztliche Wochenschrift , issue number 9, 1906, p. 100

Lungershausen'scher Hof

The Lungershausen'sche Hof in Bückeburg around 1900

Arnold Lungershausen was the owner and namesake of the property called " Lungershausen'scher Hof " on Petersilienstraße in Bückeburg, which later also became known as "Münchhausenhof" and better known as the seat of the Bückeburg helicopter museum at today's Sablé-Platz.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h Lungershausen †. In: Berliner Tierärztliche Wochenschrift . (BTW). 1907, ISSN  0365-9984 , p. 282. ( limited preview in Google book search)
  2. ^ Otto Elster : Wilhelm, Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe. Noble Herr zu Lippe, Count zu Sternberg and Schwalenberg, kuk general of the cavalry, owner of the Secundogenitur-Fideikommiss-Herrschaft Nachod-Chwalkowitz ...: A picture of his life and work. (= Forgotten Books ). Reprint of the 1906 edition. Unicum Verlag, Barsinghausen 2016, ISBN 978-3-8457-0129-5 , p. 5. ( limited preview in Google book search)
  3. ^ Heinrich Rieckenberg (arr.): Schaumburg emigrants: 1820–1914. (= Schaumburger studies. Booklet 48). C. Bösendahl, Rinteln 1988, ISBN 3-87085-122-3 , p. 348. ( limited preview in Google book search)
  4. a b Centralblatt for Bacteriology, Parasitology , Infectious Diseases and Hygiene , Department 1: Medical-hygienic bacteriology, virus research and animal parasitology. Originals , Volume 41, Jena: G. Fischer, p. 638; ( limited preview in Google Book search)
  5. ^ Jan-Peter Frahm , Jens Eggers: Lexicon of German-speaking bryologists . Volume 1, Botanical Institute of the University of Bonn, Bonn 2001, ISBN 3-8311-0986-9 , p. 150. ( limited preview in Google book search)
  6. ^ Opinion on the Jewish ritual slaughter process ("Schächten") , Berlin: Verlag von Emil Apolant, 1894, p. 68; Digitized by the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover
  7. Hirsch Hildesheimer: The Schächten. A preliminary discussion , extended special reprint from the June 1905 issue of the Blätter für hoches Schulwesen . Monthly to promote the interests of the academically educated German teaching class (Verlag Rosenbaum & Hart), 2nd edition, Berlin: Gutenberg, 1906, p. 10; Digitized from the Freimann Collection of the University Library of the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main
  8. ^ Ernst von Schwartz: The anesthetic slaughter of the Israelites ... , Konstanz am Bodensee: Verlag von Ernst Ackermann, 1905, p. 160; Digitized version of the Frankfurt Main University Library
  9. ^ Messages from the Association of German Freemasons 1894–1895 , Leipzig: Printed by Bruno Zechel, 1895, p. 88 .; Digitalisat the Berlin State Library - Prussian Cultural Heritage
  10. ^ Seventh International Veterinary Congress. Baden-Baden, 7th - 12th August 1899 = VIIme Congrès International de Médecine Vétérinaire = International Veterinary Congress 7 1899 Baden-Baden , conference paper , Baden-Baden: Kölblin, 1899, p. Lx; ( limited preview in Google Book search)
  11. a b With access for light and air. In: Schaumburger Nachrichten . March 11, 2018, accessed December 10, 2019 .