Felix Lommel

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Felix Lommel (born September 7, 1875 in Erlangen , † June 29, 1968 in Bad Endorf ) was a German doctor and university professor.

Life

The son of the Munich university professor of physics Eugen Lommel and his wife Luise Friederike Caroline, née Hegel (1853–1924), attended Munich's Maximiliansgymnasium from 1886 to 1893 (Abitur) and then studied medicine at the universities of Munich , Würzburg and Kiel , a. a. with Friedrich Moritz , Carl von Voit , Wilhelm von Leube and Heinrich Irenaeus Quincke . He was promoted to Dr. med. doctorate and licensed as a doctor . He initially worked under Max Matthes as an assistant doctor at the medical clinic in Jena and completed his habilitation in 1902. From 1907 he taught as a private lecturer and a. o. Professor at the university. In 1909 he was appointed director of the medical polyclinic and in 1923 full professor in Jena. In 1910 he suggested the establishment of an inpatient department for babies . In 1924 he arranged for the former garrison hospital to be converted into a tuberculosis clinic under the auspices of the Thuringian State Insurance Institute and made available to the university for teaching and research purposes. One of the employees here was his student Julius Kayser-Petersen (1886–1954). In 1947 the clinic was taken over by the state health system as a sanatorium . Lommel retired in 1945 , but remained based in Jena. His first marriage was to Anna Maria, née von Praun (1875–1942), then to Frieda Stempfle, née Michels. Helmut Lommel (1903–1981) was a son of the first marriage.

In 1914 Felix Lommel was one of the signatories of the Declaration of University Professors in the German Reich . In the course of his activity he received numerous honors, including an honorary doctorate and honorary membership in the German Society for Internal Medicine . A cast bronze medal with his portrait, on the reverse a male riding a Centaur , was designed by his brother Friedrich Lommel (1883–1967) in 1950.

Fonts (selection)

  • About the origin of oxalic acid in urine . Medical dissertation at the University of Jena . Lippert & Co., Naumburg an der Saale 1899.
  • Clinical observations on cardiac arrhythmia. Habilitation thesis at the University of Jena. Lippert & Co., Naumburg an der Saale 1902.
  • Clinical observations on cardiac arrhythmia. From the medical clinic in Jena (Director: Prof. Dr. Stintzing ) , in: German Archive for Clinical Medicine, Vol. 72. Verlag FCW Vogel, Leipzig 1902, pp. 216-257 and 465-503.
  • About the viscosity of human blood during sweating procedures , in: German Archives for Clinical Medicine, Vol. 80, 1904, pp. 308-316.
  • The gastric and intestinal movements in the X-ray and their changes due to various influences , in: Münchner Medizinische Wochenschrift . No. 38.1903.
  • On the question of sugar formation from fat (in phloridzin diabetes) , in: Archive for experimental pathology and pharmacology. Vol. 63. Verlag FCW Vogel, Leipzig 1910.
  • Diseases of adolescence , in: F. Kraus et al. (Ed.): Results of internal medicine and paediatrics, Vol. 6, Springer, Berlin 1910, p. 293.
  • Zoonoses (transmission of animal diseases), in: Gustav von Bergmann , Rudolf Staehelin (Ed.): Handbook of internal medicine . 1st edition, 1911, Volume 1; 2nd edition, 1925, Volume 1, 1926 / '27, Volume 4; 3rd edition, 1934, volume 1.
  • Diseases of the muscles, bones and joints , in: Gustav von Bergmann , Rudolf Staehelin (Hrsg.): Handbook of internal medicine , 2nd edition, 1926, 4th volume, 1st part.
  • In the shadow of civilization. Diseases of civilization, review and outlook. Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, Herford 1969.

literature

  • Hermann Degener (Ed.): Who is it ?, 4th edition, Leipzig 1909.
  • Isidor Fischer (ed.). Biographical lexicon of the outstanding doctors of the last fifty years. Volume 2. Berlin and Vienna 1933.
  • Handbook of German Science. Volume 2. Koetschau, Berlin 1949.
  • Kürschner's German Scholars Calendar 1950, 7th edition, Verlag Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 1950.
  • Felix Lommel , in: B. Schlegel (Ed.): Negotiations of the German Society for Internal Medicine. Seventy-fifth Congress. Held in Wiesbaden from April 14 to April 17, 1969. Springer Verlag, Berlin / Heidelberg 1969, p. 5.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. together with Hans von Liebig , Joseph Schnetz , Hermann Thiersch and his younger brother Gottlieb
  2. ^ Gottlieb Lommel (born July 4, 1874 in Erlangen) studied law; he died on January 14, 1899 in Munich. Other siblings were August Wilhelm Lommel (1878–1945, architect and government building officer), Friedrich Lommel (1883–1967, sculptor in Munich), Hermann Georg Lommel (1885–1965, Indo-Europeanist and professor at the University of Frankfurt) and the sisters Julie (* 1873), Lisbeth (* 1877) and Marie (* 1880)
  3. ^ Annual report on the K. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1885/86 to 1892/93
  4. http://www.archive-in-thueringen.de/haben/view/id/23279
  5. ^ Catalog of the 67th auction, Westfälische Auktionsgesellschaft, 17./18. September 2013, no.4420 (fig.)