August Budde

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August Budde also: Augustin Buddeus, August Buddaeus, Buddäus, Budde, Ptolemaeus ; (* August 7, 1695 in Anklam ; † December 25, 1753 in Berlin) was a German medic.

Life

August Budde was the son of the pastor in Anklam Franz Budde (1634–1706) and thus a half-brother of Johann Franz Buddeus . He studied from September 10, 1712 at the University of Jena , from May 25, 1716 at the University of Halle and from June 17, 1717 at the University of Leiden , where he became a student of Herman Boerhaave . For further anatomical research he went to France and England. On June 18, 1721 he returned to Leiden, where he received his doctorate in medicine on November 3 of the same year with the work de muscolorum actione et antagonismo . In 1723 he became professor of anatomy and physiology at the medical-surgical college in Berlin and director of the Theatrum anatomicum. As such, it increased the size of the institution and increased the use of corpses. From 1723 he was a full member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences . In 1725 he received the title of court counselor and became personal physician to Friedrich Wilhelm I (Prussia) . On November 14, 1726 he was elected a member ( matriculation no. 390 ) of the Leopoldina with the academic surname Ptolemy . He also wrote some works in the Carolinian Academy of Sciences. He died of a stroke.

Buddeus married the youngest daughter of the ducal-Lüneburg personal physician in Celle and later personal physician in Hanover Robert Scott.

Works

  • Dissertation. de muscolorum actione et antagonismo. Suffering 1721
  • Observationes anatommicae selectiores. Miscellanae Berolinensia ex scriptis Soc. Reg. Scient. Continuatio II there. Berlin 1727
  • Circa fabricam Sinnum Cranii eorumque aperturas in Cava narium Berlin 1727
  • Observationes miscellae about Ossa etc ... . Berlin 1737
  • De corde scabioso pueri scabiosi. Berlin 1740

literature

  • August Hirsch : Biographical lexicon of the outstanding doctors of all times and peoples. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Vienna and Leipzig, 1884, Vol. 1, p. 611
  • Wilhelm von Waldeyer-Hartz: To the history of anatomical instruction in Berlin. Gustav Schade, Berlin, 1899, p. 36
  • Johann Georg Meusel : Lexicon of the German writers who died from 1750 to 1800. Gerhard Fleischer d. J., Leipzig, 1802, vol. 1, p. 649 ( online )
  • Johann Christoph Adelung : Continuations and additions to Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general scholar = lexico, which writers of all classes are described according to their most distinguished living conditions and writings. Johann Friedrich Gleditsch , Leipzig, 1784, vol. 1, col. 2362

Individual evidence

  1. according to other 1752
  2. Reinhold Jauering, Marga Steiger: The register of the University of Jena. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar, 1977, vol. 2, p. 98 Sp. B
  3. ^ Fritz Juntke, Franz Zimmermann: Matriculation of the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. University and State Library Halle, Halle (Saale), 1960, p. 57, Sp. B
  4. WN du Rieu: Album Studiosorum Academiae Lugduno Batavae MDLXXV - MDCCCLXXV. Martin Nijhoff, The Hague, 1925, p. 853
  5. WN du Rieu: Album Studiosorum Academiae Lugduno Batavae MDLXXV - MDCCCLXXV. Martin Nijhoff, The Hague, 1925, p. 874
  6. ^ Philipp Christiaan Molhuysen : Album Promotorum Academiae Lugdono Batavae. The Hague, 1913-1924, p. 282
  7. ^ Members of the previous academies. Augustine Buddeus. Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences , accessed on March 3, 2015 .
  8. ^ Johann Daniel Ferdinand Neigebauer: History of the imperial Leopoldino-Carolinische German academy of natural scientists during the second century of its existence. Friedrich Frohmann, Jena, 1860, p. 210, no. 390 ( online )
  9. Member entry of August Buddäus at the German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina , accessed on March 27, 2016.
  10. * February 2, 1646 Haus Itsche (Scotland), † February 1, 1714 in Celle, June 9, 1673 Dr. med in Angiers (France), then worked as a field doctor in France, became court physician and personal physician to Duke Georg Wilhelm von Braunschweig-Lüneburg-Celle, after his death personal physician to the Elector in Hanover, 16 children came from his two marriages most of them had died, resulting in a son and two daughters (Fritz Roth: Leichenpreduchten .... R 8380)