Gottfried Fleischmann

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Gottfried Fleischmann (born February 23, 1777 in Erlangen ; † August 22, 1850 ibid) was a German doctor and university professor.

Life

Gottfried Fleischmann was the son of a doctor.

He studied medicine at the University of Erlangen and heard lectures from Georg Friedrich Hildebrandt , Friedrich von Wendt and Friedrich Heinrich Loschge (1755–1840); In 1800 he received his doctorate. med.

In 1804 he received the position of prosector at the anatomical theater and in 1810 he qualified as a private lecturer at the University of Erlangen . In 1818 he was appointed associate professor and in 1824 full professor of anatomy and physiology and director of the anatomical institute.

He remained unmarried throughout his life.

Scientific work

Gottfried Fleischmann published various writings on normal anatomy and developmental history as well as in 1820 on pathological anatomy, on which he had also completed his habilitation. He published a collection of 96 cadaver openings and his compendium, Instructions for Forensic and Police Investigation of Human and Animal Corpses, dealt with the anatomical side of forensic medicine. He published a paper on strangulation in Adolph Henke's journal for state medicine. In the 2nd volume of the German Archives for Physiology edited by Johann Friedrich Meckel he is also named as co-editor.

Memberships

Gottfried Fleischmann became a member of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in 1820 .

Awards

On the occasion of his fiftieth doctoral jubilee on June 21, 1850, he received the Order of St. Michael from the King .

Fonts (selection)

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ List of members of the Leopoldina. Retrieved May 22, 2019 .
  2. ^ GW Schrader: Biographisch-Literarisches Lexicon Der Thierärzte of all times and countries. Рипол Классик, 1967, ISBN 5-87929-124-3 , p. 134 ( limited preview in Google Book search).