Bernhard Barnstorff

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bernhard Barnstorff (born September 14, 1645 in Rostock ; † April 22, 1704 ibid) was a German medic .

Life

Bernhard Barnstorff was born the son of the Rostock pharmacist Peter (1606–1652) and his wife Agneta Scharffenberg. In March 1657 he was enrolled at the University of Rostock for the first time , without, however, having sworn the enrollment oath as he was still a minor. In 1664 he began a two-year course in philosophy and medicine at the University of Wittenberg with Michael Sennert and Konrad Viktor Schneider, among others . He held his first disputation in 1665 , on the subject of hidden properties , and a year later on the design of meteors . In the following year, 1667, he continued his studies at the University of Rostock.

In 1668/1669 he went on a research trip to the Netherlands , France and England . One year of that he stayed at the University of Leiden to attend lectures by, among others, Franciscus Sylvius . He also visited hospitals in Oxford and Paris . On his return to Germany he visited the universities of Strasbourg , Heidelberg , Jena , Frankfurt and Leipzig . Back in Rostock he heard other lectures, among others, Johann Bacmeister , and was finally at Bacmeister on February 28, 1671 for Doctor of Medicine doctorate . His dissertation was on the virgin disease . He then worked as a general practitioner and in May 1671 married Elisabeth Weidenkopf, the daughter of Doctor Eberhard Weidenkopf.

On January 28, 1686, Barnstorff was appointed full professor of medicine in Rostock , as his predecessor, Johan Jacob Döbelius the Elder , had died on June 3, 1684. When he took office, he gave the speech on the imperceptible evaporation of the human body and wrote on the rule of the imagination over the senses . In 1695 he was appointed senior of his faculty and was university rector six times , one of them deputy: 1686, 1691, 1695, 1696, 1696 and 1702.

He died in Rostock on April 22nd, 1704 at the age of 58. Barnstorff's successor at the university was Wilhelm David Habermann .

His son Eberhard Barnstorff was a medicine professor in Greifswald ; in addition, Bernhard had had a brother, the law professor Johann Barnstorff .

Barnstorff was considered a hard-working and conscientious teacher as well as a doctor. At the university he was actually a professor of medicine, but also gave lectures on chemistry , which is why he was sometimes referred to as a professor of chemistry.

Works

  • Programma Quo Rector Universitatis Rostochiensis Bernhardus Barnstorff […] ad exsequias, Quas […] Elisabethae Schröders / […] Dn. Christiani Schröders / IUD […] Superstitis relictae Filiae, Moestissima Mater, Vidua Schröderiana, hodie paratas cupit, Omnes Academiae Cives […] invitat (Rostock 1692)
  • Programma Quo Rector Universitatis Rostochiensis Bernhardus Barnstorff Med. D. Prof. Publicus & Poliater Dominum Nostrum Jesum Christum aeternum Dei Filium propter iustitiam nostram ex mortuis resurgentem ipso Paschatis the XII. April. A. 1696 Omnibus Civibus proponitea, qua fas est, pietate serio contemplandum & collaudandum (Rostock 1696)
  • Programma Quo Rector Universitatis Rostochiensis Bernhardus Barnstorff Med. D. PP. & Poliater Notitiam De Angelis Ipso Michaelis Festo Omnes Academiae Cives sibi magis magisq [ue] tanquam pietatis Studiosi apud animum ut confirment, ea qua fas est humanite rogat atque contendit (Rostock 1696)
  • Programma Quo Rector Universitatis Rostochiensis Bernhardus Barnstorff Med. D. Prof. Publicus & Poliater. Ad Passionem Domini Nostri Jesu Christi ipsius Filii Dei Contra Bacchanalia rite & attentius considerandam Omnium ordinum Cives ea qua fas est, humanitate serio adhortatur (Rostock 1696)
  • Programma Quo Rector Universitatis Rostochiensis Bernhardus Barnstorff […] Ad Cohonestandas Exequias Quas Matronae Honoratissimae Elisabethae Petri, Viri […] Valentini Mölleri […] relictae Viduae Liberi Moestissimi Solemniter decenterq [ue] paratas cupinntores [Universitatis huitatis hu (Rostock 1696)

literature

Web links


Individual evidence

  1. Brüggemann states September 4, 1625. New general biographical dictionary speaks of September 14, 1625. Most of the literature is found in 1645, for example in Falkenberg, Henke or Krey.
  2. Here, too, Brüggemann states something else. There it says […] became a professor in 1686 and died in the same year. This was also done by New general biographical dictionary .
  3. ^ Enrollment of Bernhard Barnstorff in the Rostock matriculation portal
  4. a b c Falkenberg
  5. a b biography of the doctors
  6. a b c d Adolph Henke's magazine for the state medicine
  7. ^ A b New general biographical dictionary
  8. a b Krey
  9. ^ Hofmeister, Adolph: The matriculation of the University of Rostock III. (East. 1611 - Mich. 1694) Rostock 1895
  10. Doctorate from Bernhard Barnstorff in the Rostock matriculation portal
  11. ^ Reception by Bernhard Barnstorff in the Rostock matriculation portal
  12. ^ Hofmeister, Adolph: The matriculation of the University of Rostock III. (East. 1611 - Mich. 1694) Rostock 1895
  13. Anna-Katharina Szagun: Rostock - way while walking , 2001, page 77; online at Google Books