Hans von Haberer

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Johann Baptist Martin Theodor Wilhelm Anton Haberer von Kremshohenstein , also Hans von Haberer , (born March 12, 1875 in Vienna , † April 29, 1958 in Düren ) was an Austrian surgeon , medical officer and university professor .

Life

The son of a Viennese ministerial official studied medicine at the universities of Vienna and Graz from 1894 to 1900 . In May 1900 he was awarded a Dr. med. PhD . He received an assistant position in pathology at Holl and wrote his first publication on the veins of the human testicle . In 1901 he was assistant physician at Anton Eiselsberg at the University of Vienna , where he in 1907 for surgery habilitated .

Innsbruck and Graz

Since 1911 professor at the University of Innsbruck , at the age of 36 he was the youngest professor in Austria-Hungary . During the First World War he worked in South Tyrol and served as a senior staff doctor . Because of his high reputation, he was elected dean of the medical faculty there from 1920 to 1921 and rector of the University of Innsbruck from 1923 to 1924 . At that time he was part of Ferdinand Sauerbruch's domestic affairs in Munich. In November 1924 he followed the call of the University of Graz to her chair, where he stayed for four years.

Düsseldorf and Cologne

In 1928 he went to the Düsseldorf Medical Academy as a full professor and was its rector in 1929/30. In December 1930, while he was still rector, he was appointed to the University of Cologne . Haberer became director of the Lindenburg University Surgical Clinic (1930–1948) and deputy director of the Augustahospital (1930–1934).

Haberer had been a supporting member of the SS since 1933 and became a member of the NSDAP in 1937 . From April 1935 to October 1938 he was rector at the head of the University of Cologne. During the Second World War he worked as a consulting surgeon in France and Russia, since July 1942 as a general practitioner .

Prime Minister Conference of the countries of the 3 western zones of Germany at the Berghotel Rittersturz in Koblenz (July 8th - 10th, 1948).

(from left to right: Wilhelm Kaisen, Hans Haberer, Karl Friedrich Zörgiebel) After the war, Haberer was dismissed for political reasons by order of the British military government . In 1948 he was classified in group V ("exonerated") in the arbitration chamber proceedings and retired in the same year .

Professional services

Haberers' specialties were visceral surgery , vascular surgery and war surgery. He developed the gastric resection according to Theodor Billroth . He was able to build on the experience of nearly 4,000 gastric resections. Because of his excellent surgical technique for these interventions, numerous surgeons from all over Europe soon came to get to know his method. His scientific work comprises 299 individual publications and 10 articles in handbooks and textbooks on almost all areas of surgery.

family

Hans von Haberer was married and had a daughter who married the surgeon Rudolf Kraft in 1925 . From 1921 to 1936, Kraft learned and worked at Haberer in Innsbruck, Graz, Düsseldorf and Cologne. The daughter died just a few months after her father died. Julius Kraft-Kinz completed his surgical apprenticeship from 1951 to 1956 with his uncle Rudolf Kraft, who was then chief surgeon in the city hospital in Düren .

Honors

Hans von Haberer Certificate of Honor

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ferdinand Sauerbruch, Hans Rudolf Berndorff : That was my life. Kindler & Schiermeyer, Bad Wörishofen 1951; cited: Licensed edition for Bertelsmann Lesering, Gütersloh 1956, p. 288.
  2. a b Michael Grüttner : Biographical Lexicon on National Socialist Science Policy (= Studies on Science and University History. Volume 6). Synchron, Heidelberg 2004, ISBN 3-935025-68-8 , pp. 68-69.
  3. [1]  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 3.4 MB), article from Chirurgie - issue 4/2010, BÖC Vienna@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.boec.at