Franz Eschle

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Franz Eschle (born February 23, 1859 in Königsberg i. Pr. , † 1918 ) was a German physician. He was director of the nursing home of the Heidelberg district in Sinsheim.

Life

Eschle studied medicine at the Albertus University of Königsberg from 1876 to 1881 . In 1879 he was reciprocated in the Corps Hansea Königsberg . As an inactive , he moved to the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg , where he was awarded a Dr. med. received his doctorate. He then worked as an assistant doctor and second doctor at the private mental hospital in Pankow founded by Emanuel Mendel and headed by Paul Richter . In 1885 he moved to the Lazarus Hospital in Berlin . In 1886/87 he worked as a general practitioner in Hamburg. 1887-1891 he served as a paramedic in Konstanz and Colmar . He then worked as the first assistant at the Medical University Polyclinic Freiburg. From 1896–1902 he was director of the nursing home of the Karlsruhe and Baden-Baden districts for the physically and mentally infirm in Hub . In 1902 he was appointed director of the nursing home in Sinsheim. He held this position until his death at the age of 59.

Works

  • Brief outline of health and nursing care . Berlin 1902.
  • The pathological weakness of will and the tasks of educational therapy . Berlin 1904.
  • Basics of psychiatry . Vienna 1907.
  • Functional therapy . Berlin 1910.
  • Functional diagnostics . Berlin 1912.
  • Catechism for helpers of the Red Cross . Munich 1913.

literature

  • Medical literature and writer vademecum, 1907/08

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 87/77.
  2. Dissertation: About syphilitic dactilitis .
  3. ^ Pankow insane asylum
  4. ^ Eschle, Franz Curt Reinhard In: Heinz Voss, Bruno Volger: Literary silhouettes: German poets and thinkers and their works. A literary-critical yearbook. Volger, Leipzig 1909.
  5. Eschle, Franz CR In: Alma Kreuter: German-speaking neurologists and psychiatrists: a biographical-bibliographical lexicon from the precursors to the middle of the 20th century , 1st volume Saur, Munich 1996.