Friedrich Lindhorst

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Heinrich Julius Louis Friedrich Lindhorst (born November 24, 1867 in Verden (Aller) , † March 30, 1950 in Delmenhorst ) was a German veterinarian.

Life

Friedrich Lindhorst was born as the son of the carpentry entrepreneur Heinrich Ludwig Lindhorst. Since the summer semester of 1886 he studied at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Berlin and the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover . In 1886 he became a member of the Corps Franconia Berlin. In 1888 he joined the Corps Normannia Hanover . He received his veterinary license in Berlin in 1891. He then worked briefly as a veterinarian in Hamburg and Verden. On November 21, 1892, he established himself as a practical veterinarian in Delmenhorst. After he had passed the district veterinary exam in Munich in 1896, he became a district veterinarian in Delmenhorst in December 1896. In 1906 he was at the University of Berne Dr. med. vet. PhD. At the beginning of 1916 he became a veterinary councilor and official veterinarian. In 1933 he retired as a veterinary councilor. He passed his veterinary practice on to his younger son Karl Lindhorst. His grandson Volkmar Lindhorst continued the practice from 1968 to 2008.

Friedrich Lindhorst developed several veterinary instruments. Together with Fritz Drahn he wrote the standard work on veterinary medicine internship in veterinary obstetrics . The Deutsche Tierärztliche Wochenschrift paid tribute to him with an obituary. He was married to Meta Meybohm.

Awards

Fonts

  • On the obstetric development of calves that are too large in relation to the space of the birth canals with special consideration of the embryotomy , 1906
  • Practical training in veterinary obstetrics , 1918 (together with Fritz Drahn; standard work on veterinary medicine)
  • Contemporary embryotomy in practice , 1944

literature

  • Fritz Riggert, Otto Gervesmann: History of the Corps Normannia Hannover, 1859, March 15, 1959, 1959, p. 116.

Individual evidence

  1. The end of a 116-year family era ( memento from August 19, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on www.dk-online.de