Johann Ludwig Hannemann

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Johann Ludwig Hannemann (born October 25, 1640 in Amsterdam , † October 25, 1724 in Kiel ) was a German doctor and professor in Kiel.

Hannemann practiced in Friedrichstadt (from 1668), Stade (from 1670) and Buxtehude (from 1673) before becoming professor of medicine at Kiel University in 1675 . He did not get his doctorate until he was already a professor. There he ensured a conservative orientation towards Galen , Aristotle and Hippocrates of Kos and fought against the more recent doctrine of blood circulation by William Harvey , with Thomas Bartholin opposing him.

He had first studied theology and also wrote on chemistry and alchemy (under the pseudonym Cato Chemicus ), botany and theology. On March 3, 1680, Johann Ludwig Hannemann , nicknamed Nestor II, was accepted as a member ( matriculation no. 90 ) in the Leopoldina .

According to the encyclopedia by Johann Samuelersch, he was the first to reject cinnabar as a medicine. Incidentally, his writings are classified there as poorly written and lengthy , which one can only read through with the greatest patience .

His library is part of the Kiel University Library .

literature

  • Andreas Elias Büchner : Academiae Sacri Romani Imperii Leopoldino-Carolinae Natvrae Cvriosorvm Historia. Litteris et impensis Ioannis Iustini Gebaueri, Halae Magdebvrgicae 1755, De Collegis, p. 470 digitized
  • Johann Daniel Ferdinand Neigebaur : History of the imperial Leopoldino-Carolinische German academy of natural scientists during the second century of its existence. Friedrich Frommann , Jena 1860, p. 193 digitized
  • Willi Ule : History of the Imperial Leopoldine-Carolinian German Academy of Natural Scientists during the years 1852–1887 . With a look back at the earlier times of its existence. Commissioned by Wilhelm Engelmann in Leipzig, Halle 1889, supplements and additions to Neigebaur's history, p. 149 ( archive.org ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry in Johann Samuelersch General Encyclopedia of Sciences and Arts , from 1818
  2. Partly printed in the Bibliotheca Chemica Curiosa