Julius Strasburger

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Julius Strasburger (1871-1934)

Julius Strasburger (born December 26, 1871 in Jena , † October 28, 1934 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German internist .

Life

Julius Eduard Strasburger was the son of the botanist Eduard Strasburger . He studied medicine at the Universities of Bonn and Freiburg and received his doctorate in Bonn in 1894 with the dissertation The Sarcome of the Colon . During his studies in Bonn in 1890 he became a member of the Medical and Natural Science Association , which later became the Landsmannschaft Marksburgia . He completed his specialist training in Berlin and Bonn, where he completed his habilitation in internal medicine in 1899 . Julius Strasburger went to the University of Breslau as an associate professor in 1911 . In 1913 he went to Frankfurt am Main as director of the Medical Polyclinic and in 1914 was appointed full professor of internal medicine for the foundation of the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University. He was removed from office by the National Socialists on September 28, 1934 at the instigation of one of his students due to the missing Aryan certificate (Jewish grandfather Julius Wertheim 1817–1901) . He died shortly afterwards on October 28, 1934.

Strasburger was particularly concerned with digestive pathology, blood circulation and physical therapy. Building on the work of Hermann Nothnagel , he and Adolf Schmidt created clinical intestinal pathology. The results of numerous publications are summarized in Die Fäzes des Menschen (1903). The Schmidt Strasburger tasting food is named after the two authors .

Strasburger was married to Marie-Edith, b. Nothnagel, the daughter of Hermann Nothnagel . He was the father of a daughter (Marie, late wife of Franz de Liagre-Böhl ) and three sons, including the zoologist Eduard Strasburger (1907–1945) and the ancient historian Hermann Strasburger (1909–1985).

Works

  • Adolf Schmidt and Julius Strasburger: About the intestinal fermentation dyspepsia (1901).
  • Adolf Schmidt and Julius Strasburger: The faeces of humans in the normal and pathological condition with special consideration of the clinical examination methods (1903, 3rd and 4th expanded edition 1915).

literature

  • Gatz: Strasburger, Julius . In: German Biographical Encyclopedia (DBE), Volume 9, p. 567.
  • Gabriele Möbus-Weigt: The Frankfurt internist and physical therapist Julius Strasburger (1871-1934) . Dissertation, 1996, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt.
  • German Gender Book Volume 207 (56th General Volume), pp. 227–250. CA Starke Verlag, Limburg 1998.
  • Klaus-Oskar Leyde: Contributions to the chronicle of the Leyde family and subsidiary lines. Self-published, 3rd edition, 2011.
  • Ludwig Heilbrunn: The foundation of the University of Frankfurt a. M. Verlag Joseph Baer & Co., Frankfurt a. M., 1915. p. 231.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Berthold Ohm and Alfred Philipp (eds.): Directory of addresses of the old men of the German Landsmannschaft. Part 1. Hamburg 1932, p. 301.
  2. W. Heupke: Julius Strasburger to memory. Archives for digestive and metabolic diseases ('Boas Archiv') 1934; 56 (5/6): 352-354. PDF