Ignác Schlesinger

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Ignác Schlesinger (born March 9, 1810 in Pressburg , † August 22, 1849 in Pest ) was a doctor and politician in Hungary .

Career

He was the son of a merchant. He lived in Pest from 1816 and studied for three years at the Pest University there . In 1830/31 he studied at the University of Vienna . In 1832 he was in Vienna with Franz Xaver von Hildenbrand Dr. med. PhD. He also worked as a gynecologist in the Vienna General Hospital . In 1833 he was appointed by the Israelite community of Güns ( Kőszeg ) as senior physician at the local hospital. In 1835 he moved to Pest, where Schlesinger did a great job building up a Pest Israelite community. In 1842 the Jewish general association for agriculture and heavy handicrafts was founded with his participation, and he became its secretary. In 1843 he was committed to founding the Pest Israelite religious community and was elected president in 1848. During the fighting of the revolutionary year he worked in the field hospital and died of pulmonary tuberculosis . Schlesinger was a founding member of the Budapest Medical Association and a corresponding member of the German Medical Association of Paris .

Works

  • A sósavas ónany muriestan (On the use of tin containing hydrochloric acid), 1838
  • Medicinal topography of the free royal cities of Pest and Oven , 1840
  • Járulék az orbánczos bajok méltánylásáról (Contributing to the recognition of red rash-like diseases), 1842
  • Átnézete az utolsó 16 év alatt Pesten a Dunába holtaknak (dissection of the last 16 bodies of the Danube found in Pest), 1843
  • Némely önállóknak tekintett betegségek rokonságáról (On the Relationship of Several Diseases That Are Independent in themselves), 1844

literature

  • Allgemeine Illustrierte Judenzeitung. March 29, 1861
  • Schlesinger Ignác. In: Magyar Életrajzi Lexicon (Hungarian)
  • Schlesinger Ignác. In: Magyar Zsidó Lexicon (Hungarian)
  • Scinnyei; Wininger; J. Einhorn: The Revolution and the Jews in Hungary. 1851, pp. 87, 101; WP Budapest.
  • Schlesinger, Ignác. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950.