Franz König (medical doctor)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franz King

Franz König (born February 16, 1832 in Rotenburg an der Fulda ; † December 12, 1910 in Grunewald near Berlin ) was a German surgeon and university professor .

Life

His father Christian König († 1871) was a personal physician on the Hessen-Rotenburg line , and later an official physician in Wetter near Marburg. His mother was his wife Amalie Knobel and came from a Hessian family of officials and pastors.

Franz König studied medicine at the Philipps University in Marburg and the Friedrich Wilhelms University in Berlin . Since November 26, 1851 he was a member of the Corps Teutonia Marburg . In 1856 he became an assistant doctor in Marburg. In 1859 he established himself as a general practitioner in Homberg (Efze) . He went to the state hospital in Hanau and married Charlotte Deines, with whom he had four sons. In 1869 he followed the reputation of the University of Rostock on the chair for surgery . In 1875 he moved to the Georg-August University in Göttingen as full professor . In 1895 he followed Heinrich Adolf von Bardeleben at the Berlin Charité , where he retired in 1904. He became a go. Medical Council appointed.

Bust of Franz König in the Berlin Charité

He married Charlotte Deines (1843-1892) in Hanau in 1862 , her parents were the manufacturer Konrad Deines (1808-1880) from Hanau and his wife Margarete Boch . He had four sons, including the surgeon Fritz König .

Works

  • The Lister bandage and the tendon suture . In: Centralblatt für Chirurgie . Volume 1, 1874, pp. [129] –131.
  • General surgery textbook for doctors and students . Berlin 1889
  • Life memories . Berlin 1912

literature

Web links

Commons : Franz König (surgeon)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Blue Book of the Corps Teutonia in Marburg 1825 to 2000 . Marburg 2000
  2. The father Dr. Christian König was a doctor in Rotenburg an der Fulda and a member of the Corps Hassia Marburg .
  3. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 166 , 297