Friedrich Tiemann

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Dietrich Friedrich-Wilhelm Tiemann (born November 30, 1899 in Stemshorn ; † September 4, 1982 in Bonn ) was a German internist , university professor and National Socialist .

Life

Tiemann attended the Ratsgymnasium Osnabrück and interrupted school in 1917 due to his participation in the First World War . After the end of the war, he joined the Ehrhardt Marine Brigade , which later became the Consul organization, and in 1919 he finished his school career in Osnabrück with a high school diploma. He then completed a degree in medicine at the universities of Freiburg, Kiel, Marburg and Göttingen until 1924. During his studies he was a member of the SV Wingolf from 1920 to 1922 and of the Marburg Student Freikorps in 1922/23. In 1926 he was awarded a Dr. med. PhD and habilitation in 1929 . As a private lecturer, he worked in Kiel as senior physician and clinic director. Since March 1930 he was married to Ilse, nee Riedel.

After the handover of power to the National Socialists , he became a member of the NSDAP on May 1, 1933 ( membership number 2.730.384) and of the Sturmabteilung in October of the same year . At the beginning of January 1935 he switched from the SA to the Schutzstaffel (SS No. 259.442), where he achieved the rank of Sanitary Colonel in 1937. From 1935 he was also a member of the Hitler Youth , the Nazi Lecturer Association and the Reich Lecturer . He also joined the NSV , the NS-Ärztebund and the DRK .

Together with his teacher Alfred Schittenhelm , he went to the University of Munich in 1934 , where he was appointed senior physician at the 2nd Medical Clinic. From 1936 he worked as an associate professor in Munich. At the beginning of November 1938, the National Socialist Tiemann Max Bürger followed the chair for internal medicine at the University of Bonn . This appointment was made without any significant consideration of the medical faculty there, but supported by his teacher Schittenhelm by means of a ministerial appointment. He also became director of the local medical outpatient clinic. He was dean of the medical faculty in 1940/41 .

After the end of the war, Tiemann was suspended from university and was interned by the Allies. Finally, he was denazified in 1948/49 after a court hearing in Bonn . He earned his living as a doctor in the internal department of the Waldbröl hospital. At the same time, he successfully reinstated his chair in Bonn, to which he was finally able to return in 1954 despite his former SS membership. Tiemann then worked in Bonn until his retirement in 1968.

literature

  • Ralf Forsbach : The Medical Faculty of the University of Bonn in the “Third Reich” . Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, Munich 2006. ISBN 978-3-486-57989-5 .
  • Ralf Forsbach: The medical faculty in the Nazi era. In: Thomas Becker (ed.): Between dictatorship and a new beginning: The University of Bonn in the Third Reich and in the post-war period . V&R unipress, Göttingen 2008, ISBN 978-3-89971-440-1 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Ralf Forsbach: The Medical Faculty of the University of Bonn in the "Third Reich" , Munich 2006, p. 158
  2. ^ Ralf Forsbach: The medical faculty in the Nazi era. In: Thomas Becker (Ed.): Between dictatorship and a new beginning: The University of Bonn in the Third Reich and in the post-war period , Göttingen 2008, p. 264f.