Franz Xaver Stocker

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Franz Xaver Stocker (* 1809 in probably Donaueschingen ; † 1875 in Aglasterhausen ) was a German doctor and revolutionary in the Baden Revolution of 1848/49.

Life

Stocker enrolled at the University of Freiburg in the winter semester of 1823, initially at the philosophy faculty, and from the winter semester of 1825 on he studied medicine. It is in the public announcement of his were made in late 1830 approval as a general practitioner - in accordance with the designation Danubiöschinganus called "Donaueschingen" and acquired in the spring of 1831 the additional licenses for any purpose - in the Universitätsmatrikel wound pharmacology and obstetrics . The first professional stations can be proven so far in Hilzingen (1841) and Tengen ( Thengenstadt ) (1843). In 1846 he was registered as a general practitioner in Haßmersheim . Here Stocker appears as a participant in the Baden revolution of 1848/49, initially as secretary of the Haßmersheimer Volksverein ; In June 1849 he joined the Baden people's armed forces as a field doctor and can finally be found in the military hospital of the besieged Rastatt fortress .

In 1850 Stocker worked as a doctor again in Haßmersheim and was still there in 1859. From here he pursued various part-time interests and around 1852 joined the association for pure German language founded in Heidelberg in 1848 . He is undoubtedly identical to the "Herr (n) Stocker from Hasmersheim" who, on September 21, 1853, at the meeting of the Section for Mineralogy, Geognosy and Geography at the 30th meeting of German naturalists in Tübingen, presented a "special geognostic map of the Lower Neckar District of Heilbronn bis Heidelberg ”, which apparently did not appear in print. Because the recognized geologist Carl Koch referred to a publication by the doctor about gypsum mining and a rock salt drilling near Haßmersheim and he emphasized that Stocker occupied himself “a lot with geognosy and petrefactology ” and was able to give “various information to the traveling mineralogist”. The praised man, who also took part in the Geognosy section at the 34th meeting of German naturalists and doctors in Carlsruhe in September 1858 , was also well versed in the “Baden flora” and worked a.o. a. to the Karlsruhe botanist and director of the Grand Ducal Badische Hof- und Landesbibliothek Johann Christoph Döll , by sending him the plants he had collected. In 1863 Stocker was named as a founding member of the short-lived association for Baden location descriptions with the indication "Doctor in Aglasterhausen " . He finally died at the last named place in 1875.

Honors

  • Dr.-Stocker-Strasse in Haßmersheim.

Fonts

  • Superposition of the colored sandstone with the wave limestone near Diedesheim am Neckar. In: New yearbook for mineralogy, geognosy, geology and petrefacts customer. Vol. 1846, pp. 793-797 ( online at Google Books).
  • About gypsum mining and rock salt drilling near Haßmersheim. [O. O.] 1847.
  • Addendum to G. Leonhard 's Minerals Baden. In: Contributions to the mineralogical and geognostic knowledge of the Grand Duchy of Baden 2 (1853), p. 93 f. ( online at Google Books).

literature

  • Heinrich Raab: Art. Stocker. In: Revolutionaries in Baden 1848/49. Biographical inventory for the sources in the Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe and in the Staatsarchiv Freiburg. Edited by Alexander Mohr (= publications of the State Archives Administration Baden-Württemberg 48). Stuttgart 1998 ISBN 3-17-015373-0 , p. 923.

Individual evidence

  1. Year of birth according to the German Medicinal Calendar. Vol. 2. Section 2: Schematism of civil and military doctors in southern Germany with the Reichslanden. According to official sources. Eduard Besold, Erlangen 1875, p. 12 ( online at Google Books).
  2. ↑ Year of death according to Süddeutsche Reichs-Post (Augsburg). No. 264 of November 11, 1875, o. S. (under family news ) ( online at Google Books).
  3. ^ The register of the University of Freiburg im Breisgau from 1806-1870. Arranged by Thomas Adolph. Masch. 1991, p. 202, Sigle 23W115 ( online as PDF ).
  4. ^ Grand Ducal Baden State and Government Gazette No. 14 of November 3, 1830, p. 158 ( online at Googler Books).
  5. Großherzoglich Badisches Staats- und Regierungs-Blatt no. 13 of July 20, 1831, p. 141 ( online at Google Books).
  6. Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogthums Baden 1841. G. Braun'sche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1841, p. 114 (in the directory of "not employed, or from active civil service in the Grand Duchy") ( online with Google Books ).
  7. Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogthums Baden 1843. G. Braun'sche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1843, p. 125 (in the directory of "not employed or retired from active civil service in the Grand Duchy") ( online at Google Books ).
  8. In the author's information on support conditions (see publications ), p. 793.
  9. ^ Revolution in the Southwest. Sites of the democracy movement 1848–49 in Baden-Württemberg. Edited by the working group of full-time archivists in the Baden-Württemberg City Council. 2nd edition Karlsruhe 1998, ISBN 3-88190-219-8 , p. 235. - Cf. Raab: Art. Stocker (see literature).
  10. ^ Announcements from the Baden Medical Association. Vol. 4. No. 22 of December 24, 1850, p. 190 ( online at Google Books).
  11. ^ E. Riegel: Statistics of doctors and pharmacists in Germany. G. L. Lang, Speyer 1859, p. 23 ( online at Google Books).
  12. ^ History of the founding and development of the Association of German Pure Language. Edited by Josef Dominik Karl Brugger . J. C. B. Mohr, Heidelberg 1862, p. 134 ( online at Google Books).
  13. ^ Journal of the German Geological Society 5 (1853), p. 644 ( online at Biodiversity Heritage Library ).
  14. Franz Kirchheimer: The Upper Rhine Geological Association and the establishment of the Badische Landesanstalt in 1888. In: Annual reports and communications of the Upper Rhine Geological Association (1971), pp. 83–152, p. 147, note 93).
  15. ^ S. Writings
  16. Carl Koch: About the technical value of the rocks of the Baden Neckarthales, with special consideration for the gypsum mining. In: Contributions to the mineralogical and geognostic knowledge of the Grand Duchy of Baden 3 (1854), pp. 74–96, p. 90 ( online at Internet Archive ); exceptionally, “ Dr. Stocker “the speech.
  17. As a doctor with residence in Haßmersheim in: Official report on the fourth and thirtieth meeting of German naturalists and doctors in Carlsruhe in September 1858. Chr. Fr. Müller'sche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1859, p. 314 No. 779 ( online at Google Books ).
  18. ^ Johann Christoph Döll: Contributions to botany. In: Thirty-fourth annual report of the Mannheim Association for Natural History. Mannheim 1868, pp. 30-79, p. 70 and ö. ( online at Biodiversity Heritage Library).
  19. Schwäbischer Merkur, No. 38 of February 14, 1863, p. 282 ( online at Google Books).
  20. Cf. Fritz Müßig: The street names of the last 200 years. Data collection on the local history of Haßmersheim am Neckar. Status: 2017, p. 12 ( online as [PDF]), where reference is made to Franz Xaver Stocker's work on gypsum mining. To all appearances, however, Stocker was not a doctor of medicine; if so, the doctorate in the street name would be unjustified.
  21. As an exception, when naming the author, “ Dr. Stocker “the speech.