Carl Haebler

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Carl Häbler (1912)

Carl Häbler (born January 25, 1894 in Halle (Saale) , † April 4, 1956 in Hanover ) was a German surgeon.

Life

As the son of a chemist and factory director, Häbler grew up in Forst (Lausitz) . He attended the local Progymnasium and the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Gymnasium (Cottbus) . After graduating from high school, he studied medicine at the University of Leipzig . In 1912 he was reciprocated in the Corps Lusatia Leipzig . In 1914 he reported to the front as a war volunteer . As a field doctor in an infantry regiment, he was awarded both classes of the Iron Cross . When the war ended, he was captured by the British and wrote a manual in the camp for the active members of his corps, which he introduced in Leipzig in 1919 as the “Glimmer Book”. As a guideline for good behavior, it was reissued in 1964 by Erich Bauer in 4000 copies. Häbler was promoted to Dr. med. PhD. He completed his surgical training at the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg . In 1926 he completed his habilitation. In Würzburg he was also appointed associate professor . He dealt with the physical chemist Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Schade .

Häbler was a member of the NSDAP and the National Socialist German Medical Association . In the army he was chief medical officer and consulting surgeon . As one of the first surgeons, he reported on his experiences with intramedullary nailing according to Gerhard Küntscher as early as 1944 . In the post-war period he took care of the rebuilding of Corps Misnia IV in Erlangen. He received her ribbon and charged as a Lusatian when the Meißner were admitted to the Lusatia-Leipzig in Erlangen on December 3, 1949. In 1950 he became the chief surgeon of the Clementinenhaus surgery in Hanover .

Works

  • Physico-chemical problems in surgery . Springer, Berlin 1930.
  • The osteosynthesis in the professional association treatment . Archive for orthopedic and trauma surgery 38 (1937), pp. 283–289.
  • Physico-chemical medicine according to Heinrich Schade . Steinkopff, Dresden Leipzig 1939.
  • Marrow nailing according to Küntscher for broken shafts of long tubular bones , 2nd edition. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Berlin 1950.

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Karl Philipp Behrendt: The war surgery from 1939-1945 from the point of view of the consulting surgeons of the German army in the Second World War . Dissertation, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg 2003. Online version (PDF; 2.3 MB)
  2. a b Personal files of the Corps Lusatia Leipzig
  3. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 3/799
  4. Erich Bauer: History of the Corps Lusatia in Leipzig 1807-1932 . Zeulenroda 1932, p. 412
  5. ^ The Association of Alter Corps Students obtained the 4th edition in 1971 (2000 copies). The modified 5th edition from 2011 contains errors and deficiencies.
  6. Dissertation: About the operation of the large maxillary cysts protruding into the antrum Highmori according to the principle of the Caldwell-Luc antral operation .
  7. Habilitation thesis: Investigations on the molecular pathology of the experimental small intestinal obstruction .
  8. Max Buchner (ed.): From the past of the University of Würzburg: Festschrift for the 350th anniversary of the university (1932)
  9. Marrow nailing according to Küntscher for broken shafts of long tubular bones . 1944, 1950
  10. KCL 1996, 100/87
  11. ^ Negotiations of the German Society for Surgery (1950)