Ignaz Heinrich Schürmayer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ignaz Heinrich Schürmayer (born February 4, 1802 in Freiburg im Breisgau ; † May 24, 1881 there ; also Schirmeyer, Schuermayer, Schürmeyer, Schurmeyer) was a German doctor and coroner.

Schürmayer studied medicine in Freiburg as the son of a hammer mill owner and received his doctorate in 1824 ( on the construction and performance of serous hides ). Schürmayer worked as a medical officer and medical officer in Emmendingen and Bonndorf and from 1848/1849 as a full professor of forensic medicine at Heidelberg University . However, at his request, he was transferred back to Emmendingen as senior physician in the same year. Schürmayer was the author of many papers in the field of forensic medicine and medical police .

Publications

  • Instructions for the secure healing of the broken bones of the thigh and lower leg, using a simple and inexpensive machine. , Freiburg, 1833
  • The malpractice of medical professionals in criminal, judicial-medical and medical-police relations , Freiburg, 1838
  • Textbook of forensic medicin ... , Erlangen, 1861
  • Medicinal and medical police  : I. Pokenkrankheit as an object of the Medicinal Police, Erlangen, 1862
  • Textbook of Forensic Medicin. Taking into account the more recent national and international legislation, in particular the procedure in jury courts. For doctors and lawyers Erlangen, 1854
  • Forensic medical clinic; or, Practical lessons for the examination and assessment of forensic medical cases ... , Erlangen, 1846
  • Practical Manual of Minor or Auxiliary Surgery. In addition to instructions for the ambulance and correct handling of the post-mortem examination ... , Erlangen, 1847
  • Medical Police Handbook; according to the principles of the rule of law, to academic lectures, and to self-teaching for doctors and lawyers , Erlangen, 1856

swell

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Eberhard Stübler: History of the Medical Faculty of the University of Heidelberg 1386–1925. Heidelberg 1926, p. 326.
  2. ^ Walter Artelt : Ernst Georg Short (1859–1937). Senckenberg Institute for the History of Medicine, Frankfurt am Main 1963, p. 13