Julius Baer

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Julius Baer (born March 24, 1876 in Wiesbaden ; died October 7, 1941 in Haifa ) was a German internist who taught at the Goethe University in Frankfurt .

Life

Baer's father Hermann Baer was a Jewish merchant in Wiesbaden. Baer passed his matriculation examination in 1894 at the Wiesbaden Humanist High School. He studied medicine in Freiburg im Breisgau , Munich  and Strasbourg . After the state examination in Strasbourg in the winter semester of 1898/99, he received his license to practice medicine . In 1899 he received his doctorate in Strasbourg .

After completing the state examination, he worked in the Ear Clinic in Strasbourg and in the clinic of Carl Jakob Adolf Christian Gerhardt in Berlin. In 1907 he completed his habilitation in Strasbourg and became a private lecturer . In 1913 he became a full professor . In the First World War , he led from 1914 to 1915, a typhoid -Seuchen hospital  in Laon . In the following years he was a department doctor in the field artillery regiment 500 and worked in the garrison in Strasbourg.

In 1919 he moved to Frankfurt, where he established himself as a doctor for internal diseases. From 1920 he was employed as a private lecturer at the foundation university there , from 1922 as a professor. As a Jewish lecturer, his license to teach was revoked in 1935. At the end of 1935 he emigrated to Palestine .

Baer had married Thilde Baer (1892–1915) in 1912. In 1920 he was married to Olga Aron in his second marriage.

Works (selection)

  • About the occurrence and behavior of some types of sugar in the blood and in pathological fluids . C & J. Goeller, Strasbourg 1899 (dissertation).
  • About tubercular granulations of the middle ear . 1900.

literature