Friedrich Bumüller

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Friedrich Bumüller (born July 14, 1842 in Kreuzlingen , † May 7, 1914 in Ravensburg ) was a German physician, city doctor and medical officer in Ravensburg.

Life

Bumüller (also written Bumiller) was a son of the high school teacher and writer Johannes Bumüller and his wife Maria Katharina Anna Zengerle. He was born in Kreuzlingen when his father was a high school professor and school inspector for the Gottlieben district at the school seminar there , and he was baptized with the name Friedrich Wilhelm.

Bumüller studied human medicine at the University of Tübingen from 1860 to 1866 , where he was awarded a doctorate in 1866. med. PhD. He was a member of the Corps Franconia .

After completing his studies, Bumüller held the position of city doctor for Ravensburg, where his parents had settled permanently in 1857, and at the same time acted as a medical councilor for the neighboring Weingarten garrison and the infantry regiment "Kaiser Wilhelm, King of Prussia" (2nd Württembergisches ) No. 120 . In 1874 Bumüller joined the Association for Patriotic Natural History in Württemberg , based in Stuttgart.

Family relationships

On June 4, 1868, Friedrich Bumüller married Helene Duke in Wolfegg (born in Wolfegg on December 6, 1846 as the daughter of Anton Duke, pharmacist in Wolfegg, and Emma Wagner). This marriage has three (surviving) sons: Max Friedrich , born in Wolfegg on March 3, 1871, who studied law at the University of Tübingen from 1891 to 1897. Johann Anton , born in Ravensburg on September 22, 1873, who later became a pastor and anthropologist. Maximilian Franziskus ( Franz ), born in Ravensburg on February 10, 1872, who established himself as a lawyer in Wangen.

Works

In 1886, Bumüller wrote a written statement on the spread of prostitution in the city on behalf of the Ravensburg city council.

literature

  • Dorothee Breucker, Gesa Ingendahl: Perspective . Life and work of women in Ravensburg. A historical reader . Edited by the city of Ravensburg. Silberburg-Verlag, Tübingen and Stuttgart 1993, ISBN 3-87407-172-3 , pp. 90-101
  • Peter Eitel: Ravensburg in the 19th and 20th centuries: politics, economy, population, church, culture, everyday life . Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Ostfildern 2004, p. 204.
  • Immo Eberl, with the collaboration of Irmgard Simon and Franz Rothenbacher: The families and civil status cases in the parishes of the city of Schelklingen (1602–1621, 1692–1875) and Ursprunging monastery (1657–1832) . 2. verb. and exp. Self-published edition, Mannheim 2012, No. 263, p. 108.

swell

  • Main State Archives Stuttgart, inventory E 162 II: Medical College: Personal files, 1. Doctors, Bü 80 a, Bumüller, Friedrich (* July 14, 1842 in Kreuzlingen, Canton Thurgau), 1 fasc., 1857–1867.
  • Main State Archives Stuttgart, military holdings 1871 – approx. 1920, M 430/1 Bü 348 Personal files Dr. Friedrich Bumüller.
  • Haustein, Jörg (2001), Liberal Catholic Journalism in the Late Empire: «The New Century» and the Kraus Society . Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
  • City archive Ravensburg, family books of the registry office, vol. 4, p. 280 (on Friedrich Wilhelm Bumüller).
  • City archive Ravensburg, family books of the registry office, vol. 3, p. 384 (on Johann Anton Bumüller).
  • University archive Tübingen, Friedrich Bumüller (1842–1914), student file no. 40 / 33,109.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Annual books of the Association for Patriotic Natural History in Württemberg 62, 1906, p. XXXIII: "Bumiller, Friedrich, Sanitätsrat in Ravensburg. (Year of entry) 1874. “[Internet: http://archive.org/stream/jahresheftedesve62vere/jahresheftedesve62vere_djvu.txt full text].
  2. University archive Tübingen, student file order signature: 40 / 33,110.
  3. ^ Haustein, 2001: 60.
  4. Eitel, 2004: 204; Breucker and Ingendahl, 1993: 90-101, esp. 90-91.