Franciszek Ludwik Neugebauer

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Franciszek Ludwik Neugebauer (also Franz Ludwig Neugebauer ; born April 13, 1856 in Kalisch , † November 13, 1914 in Warsaw ) was a Polish - Russian gynecologist .

He was born in the last year of his father Ludwig Adolf Neugebauer's activity in Kalischer as one of two sons in his marriage to Klara Schroetter. Soon after his birth the family moved to Warsaw, where Franciszek that in 1874 High School took off and at the medical faculty of the University of Warsaw enrolled . After two years he went to the University of Dorpat , at that time a large training center for Polish Protestants , who had their own fraternity . He finished his medical studies in 1881 and then worked for six years as a practicing gynecologist at various clinics throughout Western Europe.

After returning to Congress Poland , he became an assistant at the Warsaw Holy Spirit Hospital, where he worked under the direction of his father. In 1893 he went to the Evangelical Hospital in Warsaw, where he worked as head of the gynecological department from 1897 until his death. At the same time he was a member of the council of the Evangelical Congregation.

Franz L. Neugebauer was the author of 391 scientific papers and articles and a member of 33 national and international scientific societies. He was considered an authority on the question of hermaphroditism . In 1904 he was to be appointed professor at the Imperial Russian University of Warsaw, but was not given the title because of a lack of knowledge of the Russian language (the Polish University of Warsaw was only opened by the German occupation authorities in 1915, during the reign of Poland ).

He donated his library to the Warsaw Medical Association . He and his brother Edmund Ludwig , Doctor of Chemistry († 1925), were buried next to their parents in the Evangelical Cemetery in Warsaw . (Avenue A No. 15).

literature

  • Franz Ludwig v Neugebauer: Hermaphroditism in humans 1908.
  • Eugeniusz Szulc: Cmentarz Ewangelicko-Augsburski w Warszawie. Zmarli i i Rodziny. Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, Warsaw 1989, ISBN 83-06-01606-8 ( Biblioteka Syrenki ).