Carl Zarniko

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Carl Zarniko

Carl Zarniko (born April 14, 1863 in Goldap , East Prussia , † July 11, 1933 in Hamburg ) was a German ENT doctor .

Life

Zarniko came from an old Königsberg family. His father Rudolf Zarniko (1828–1896) was the owner of the Goldap mill. His mother Marie Käswurm (1829–1874) was the daughter of the landowner Käswurm on Tollmingkehmen . After graduating from the Friedrichsschule Gumbinnen , he served as a one-year volunteer in Cologne . In 1883 he began studying medicine at the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg . In the second semester, he switched to the Albertus University in his home country . There he became active in the Corps Normannia Königsberg in 1884 (after Robert Wollenberg ) . After the Physikum in 1885 he went to the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , where he took the state examination in 1887. In the three-emperor year he wrote his bacteriological doctoral thesis with Heinrich Irenaeus Quincke in Kiel . In 1889 he returned to Munich as a young husband , as Max Joseph Oertel's private assistant . In Vienna he heard from Adam Politzer , Viktor Urbantschitsch , Leopold Schrötter von Kristelli , Karl Stoerk , Johann Schnitzler and Hajek. In 1890 he moved to Berlin . There he attended courses with Arthur Hartmann , Bernhard Fränkel and Hermann Krause . With Carl Benda he dealt with histology . In 1893 he settled in Hamburg. He took care of the busy polyclinic of a women's association for two afternoons free of charge . 1917 appointed him Prussian State Government to Professor . For a long time he was a member of the board of the German Otological Society . In 1914 he headed their congress in Kiel. Since "the Hamburgers came from Hamburg" at that time, he was passed over as the ideal candidate in all chief physician elections in Hamburg. Art-minded and educated, he was friends with Alfred Lichtwark , among others . He died of pneumonia after a stroke .

Works

His first textbook The diseases of the nose, its sinuses and the nasopharynx is divided into sections, chapters and subdivisions with 1,001 paragraphs and acts like a code of law. It went through four editions.

literature

  • Richard Rose: Family tree of the Zarniko family (Zarnikau) . In: Walter Vogt, Lorenz Max Rheude (Hrsg.): Archive for heritage and heraldry . 11th year 1910–1911. Vogt brothers, paper mill in Saxony-Altenburg 1911, OCLC 183208242 , p. 144 (supplement) ( digitized from the Internet Archive [accessed January 10, 2015]).
  • Bernhard Koerner (ed.): German gender book . tape 68 . CA Starke, Görlitz 1930, p. 539 ( digitized on the pages of the Masovian Digital Library (Mazowiecka Biblioteka Cyfrowa) [accessed on January 10, 2015] plus East Prussian Gender Book. Volume 2.).
  • Arthur Thost : In memoriam Carl Zarniko . Archive for ear, nose and larynx medicine, 132 (1933), pp. 105-108

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Mühle Goldap on the website of the Verein für Computergenealogie (accessed January 10, 2015).
  2. ^ History of Tollmingkehmen on Ostpreussen.net (accessed on January 10, 2015).
  3. Kösener corps lists 1910, 142/179.
  4. Dissertation: Contribution to the knowledge of the diphtheria bacillus