Franz Joseph von Oberkamp

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Coat of arms of those of Oberkamp

Franz Joseph von Oberkamp (* 1710 in Amorbach , † 1767 in Heidelberg ) was a German physician and personal physician to the Cardinal and Prince-Bishop of Speyer, the Prince-Bishop of Bamberg and Würzburg and the Elector and Electress of the Palatinate.

Life

His great-grandfather Johann von Oberkamp had received the hereditary imperial knighthood as Imperial Court Councilor in Vienna in 1629 . Franz Joseph von Oberkamp was the son of the doctor Bartholomäus (Barthel) von Oberkamp zu Amorbach († 1744) and was baptized on June 21, 1710 in Amorbach. One brother was Heinrich von Oberkamp, ​​who was also born in Amorbach and was appointed court and government councilor in Bamberg in 1744 . 1752–1761 that was Vice Chancellor of the Prince Diocese of Bamberg and was hereditary with Zogenreuth .

Franz Joseph studied in Würzburg from 1732 and continued his training later a. a. also continued in Leiden and Paris. Von Oberkamp received his doctorate from Johann Simon Bauermüller in Würzburg in 1735 . In 1736 he was a research assistant at Herman Boerhaave in Leiden . After 1736 he went on a study trip to Italy and after his return he became the personal physician of the Cardinal and Prince-Bishop of Speyer Damian Hugo Philipp von Schönborn-Buchheim . In 1742 he became full professor as the successor to Johann Sebastian Edleber , Hofrat, head of the Juliusspital in Würzburg and personal physician to the Prince-Bishop of Bamberg and Würzburg Friedrich Karl von Schönborn-Buchheim . In 1748 von Oberkamp became a full professor at the University of Heidelberg and from 1750 was the personal physician of Elector Carl Theodor and Electress Elisabeth Auguste . In 1750 and 1758 he was rector of Heidelberg University. In 1753 he was appointed privy councilor.

Franz Joseph von Oberkamp was a founding member of the Palatinate Academy of Sciences in Mannheim in 1763 . He died while he was in the process of writing a recipe for himself and was buried in Heidelberg on July 7, 1767.

family

He was married to Margaretha Sophia from the old Bamberg family Neidecker, who had a hereditary share in the Neidecker family entourage . The marriage came from the court judge Johann David von Oberkamp, ​​the professor of medicine Franz Philipp von Oberkamp and Sabina von Oberkamp, ​​who married the professor of law Johannes Georg Joseph Nepomuk Wedekind . The son Franz Philipp "inherited" his father's professorship as a student, and his son-in-law Wedekind was also a member of a distinctive dynasty of professors.

Fonts

  • Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre castrensi. Engmann, Würzburg 1735 ( BSB digital )
  • True mineral content, and Würck powers derived therefrom, their Kißinger, and Bockleter Heyl-Trinck- and Baad-Brunnen, In the Fürstenthum Wirtzburg, and Hertzogthum Francken Hochfürstlichen Amts Wald-Aschach on the river Saal. Kleyer, Würzburg 1745 ( Google Books )
  • with Karl Pisani : Historia morbi et mortis . 1746 ( Google Books )
  • with Karl Pisani, Georg Christoph Stand, Johann Heinrich Schmitz, Johann Heinrich Hilterman, Nicolaus Göpffert and Michael Simon: the most submissive and obedient report of the most sad exenteration and embalming of the most blessedly fallen asleep in God. Romis. Imperial Prince and Lord Friderich Carln, Bishops of Bamberg and Wirtzburg, Duke of Francken, Our Most Gracious Prince Lord . Wirtzburg 1746 ( Google Books )

literature

  • Dagmar Drüll: Heidelberg scholars lexicon . 1652-1802. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg 1991, p. 116 ( Google Books )
  • Hans-Michael Körner (Ed.) With the collaboration of Bruno Jahn: Great Bavarian Biographical Encyclopedia. Volume 2: HO. Saur, Munich 2005, p. 1415
  • Johann Georg Meusel : Lexicon of the German writers who died from 1750 to 1800. 10, Fleischer, Leipzig 1810, p. 146 ( Google Books )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gothaisches genealogisches Taschenbuch der Briefadeligen houses, 1911, p. 686
  2. Max Buchner, From the Past of the University of Würzburg, 2014, p. 489
  3. The Bamberg Bishops 1693 to 1802, p. 452
  4. Rudolf Weber: Attracted Reuth
  5. General German Library, Volume 33, p. 382 . There, however, 1768 is given as the year of death.
  6. ^ Paul Oesterreicher, Die Burg Neideck: historically depicted, 1819, p. 13
  7. Bavarian State Archives, database of finding aids, Bamberg State Archives, archives of the Neidecker family entrepre- neurship
  8. ^ Dagmar Drüll: Heidelberger Gelehrtenlexikon. 1652-1802. P. 116
  9. Semper Apertus, p. 64