Joseph Schlagintweit

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Joseph Schlagintweit (born December 8, 1792 in Regen ; born Wilhelm August Joseph Schlagintweit , † August 10 or 11, 1854 in Munich ) was a German ophthalmologist .

Grave of Joseph Schlagintweit on the old southern cemetery in Munich location

Life

He studied medicine at the University of Landshut and received his doctorate in 1816 with the dissertation De cataractarum origine . In 1822 he founded a private sanatorium for eye patients in Munich, which he ran until his death. From 1836 to 1837 he was also a senior physician at Count Arco's cholera hospital on Valley and, from 1837, a directing physician at the Royal Institute for the Blind. Schlagintweit invented the iriankistron surgical instrument, iriankistron.

In 1824 he married Rosalie Seidl (1805–1839), who was born in Högersbräuer. He became the father of Adolf , Emil , Hermann , Robert and Eduard Schlagintweit , whom he had trained in natural sciences by private tutors. The daughter Augusta (1839–1839) and his wife Rosalia died shortly after the birth.

In 1841 he married Magdalena Elbracht (1800–1843), who, however, died in 1843. From this marriage the daughter Augusta "Mathilde" Schlagintweit emerged, who later became the wife of Lieutenant General Max Ritter von Schuh (1838–1911).

After the early death of his second wife Magdalena, Joseph Schlagintweit married a third time: Johanna Prentner (1813–1891). The children Louis, Jolanda, Maria, Max, Albrecht and Anna Schlagintweit emerged from this third marriage.

tomb

The tomb of Joseph Schlagintweit is on the old southern cemetery in Munich (burial ground 2 - Row 7 - Place 16/17) Location . His sons Adolf Schlagintweit and Hermann Schlagintweit are also lying in the grave .

Fonts

  • About the current state of artificial pupil formation in Germany (1818)
  • Draft for the new organization of the Medicinal Poor Service in the capital and residence city of Munich (1837)
  • The malignant eye inflammation of the newborn, its development, prevention and the like. safe cure; together with regulations for midwives about their behavior at the first appearance of this dangerous eye disease (1852)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Family Schlagintweit ( Memento from February 20, 2012 in the Internet Archive )