Heinrich Hildebrand (forensic doctor)

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Heinrich Hildebrand (born July 18, 1866 in Rosenthal (Hesse) , † November 1, 1940 in Marburg ) was a German forensic doctor.

Life

After graduating from high school, Hildebrand studied medicine at the Philipps University in Marburg . On October 22, 1884 he became the fourth of his family - after Reinhard von Gehren and before Georg Lucas - to be active in the Corps Hasso-Nassovia . He was honored three times as Consenior . He passed the state examination in 1889 and went to the Marburg Eye Clinic as a trainee and as an assistant doctor to the Hagen Ophthalmology Institute. With an ophthalmological work he was awarded a Dr. med. PhD . He settled down as a general practitioner in Marburg. He passed the physics examination in 1894 and became a district surgeon in Marburg in 1895 . In 1897 he went to the Marburg anatomy department as an assistant. As an assistant in the surgical department, he returned to clinical medicine in 1898. Since 1900 secondary doctor in internal medicine at the Eppendorf General Hospital , he became a forensic physician in Hamburg in 1901 . In the same year he married Frieda Fürst from Schäßburg , Transylvania . She gave him two daughters and a son. In 1902 he returned to Marburg as an associate professor for forensic medicine. He was a district doctor for Marburg and Kirchhain . During the First World War he was chief physician of the Marburg reserve hospital from 1914 to 1917 . In 1922 he was appointed full professor and director of the Forensic Medical Institute in Marburg. From 1929 he headed the school for medical-technical assistants . In 1934 he was in the then usual Ordinarienalter of 68 years emeritus . In November 1933 he signed the German professors' confession of Adolf Hitler .

From 1906 to 1938 he was chairman of the association of former members of the Corps Hasso-Nassovia in Marburg .

Works

  • Forensic Medicine . 1927.
  • Forensic Medicine. A guide for students and general practitioners . 1932.

Honors

literature

  • Catalogus professorum academiae Marburgensis. The academic teachers of the Philipps University of Marburg , Vol. II. Marburg 1979, p. 268.
  • Tina Junkers: Forensic Medicine in the Weimar Republic . Diss. Univ. Greifswald 2010.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. see Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg (HStAMR), Best. 915 No. 5758, p. 379 ( digitized version ).
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 99/475
  3. Dissertation: Sixty-six magnetic operations with successful extraction of 53 iron fragments from the inside of the eye .
  4. a b c 5th newsletter of the Corps Hasso-Nassovia, December 1940, p. 43
  5. ^ Corps newspaper of Hasso-Nassovia 46, p. 50
  6. UKGM
  7. Gerhard Aumüller (2001)
  8. a b c University Archives of Marburg