Johannes Brinkmann (medical doctor)

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Johannes Oswald Oktavio Brinkmann (born December 9, 1887 in Halle (Saale) , † June 15, 1973 in Tegernsee ) was a German doctor and university professor .

Life

Johannes Brinkmann studied medicine at the University of Leipzig after attending school . There he received his doctorate in 1914. The subject of his dissertation was The apocryphal health rules of Aristotle for Alexander the Great in the translation of Johannes Toledo .

In 1908 he signed up as a one-year volunteer with the 104th Infantry Regiment.

After the First World War he became director of the internal department of the new city hospital in Glauchau . As a private lecturer for internal medicine, he was appointed a non-official extraordinary professor at the University of Jena in 1930 . He later took over as director of the medical clinic of the Heinrich Braun Hospital in Zwickau . He spent his old age together with his wife at Tegernsee.

Professor Brinkmann specialized in internal medicine and published numerous articles on this topic and internal diseases in medical journals.

family

Johannes Brinkmann married Princess Eleonore Julie Helene Dorothee von Schoenaich-Carolath (1884–1974) on December 8, 1918 , the daughter of Prince Georg Heinrich Friedrich August von Schoenaich-Carolath.

Fonts (selection)

  • Aristotle's apocryphal rules of health for Alexander the Great in the translation of Johannes Toledo , Leipzig 1914.

literature

swell

  • Jena University Archives, Stock L, Medical Faculty, No. 385 Non-civil servants, associate professors and private lecturers, Vol. 1, 1929–1940.
  • Saxon State Archives, inventory 11,359 infantry divisions, infantry regiments, infantry battalions No. 3718 Personal file of the one-year volunteer Johannes Oswald Oktavio Brinkmann, 1908.

Individual evidence

  1. Personnel file of the one-year volunteer Johannes Oswald Oktavio Brinkmann
  2. Deutsche Literaturzeitung, weekly for criticism of international science, Volume 51, 1930, Issue 13, column 624.
  3. Herrmann AL Degener: Who is it ?. 4th edition, Degener, Leipzig 1909; Anton Bettelheim (Hrsg.): Biographisches Jahrbuch and German Nekrolog. Volume 15, Reimer, Berlin 1910.