Johann Schubert (doctor)

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Hans Schubert

Johann Schubert (pseudonym: Hans Deichelmann ) (born March 14, 1906 in Würzburg , † August 31, 1951 in Lübeck ) was a German doctor and university professor.

Life

Schubert studied medicine at the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg . 1932 as a doctor approved and 1933. Dr. med. After receiving his doctorate , he became an assistant at the Hygiene Institute at the Albertus University in Königsberg in 1937 . After his habilitation , he was a private lecturer in hygiene and bacteriology from 1940 . After the conquest of Königsberg by the Red Army , he stayed in the city. Like the pathologist Arthur Böttner , he worked under the most difficult conditions in the Hospital of Mercy , which was intended for the Germans who remained. His diary, which was published in 1949 under the title I saw Königsberg die and under the pseudonym Hans Deichelmann , dates from this time . Friedrich Hoffmann , the last curator of the Albertus University, wrote the foreword . A reprint appeared in the Aachener Nachrichten , most recently in No. 76 of July 2, 1949. Appointed associate professor for hygiene at the Georg-August University in Göttingen in 1950, he died the following year at the age of 45. After the Second World War, Göttingen was an important point of contact for many expelled scientists from the eastern regions of the German Empire . The Göttingen working group was formed in 1946.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Robert Albinus: Königsberg Lexicon . Würzburg 2002, ISBN 3-88189-441-1