Julius Wieting

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Julius Wieting Pascha

Julius Menno Wieting Pascha (born January 13, 1868 in Geestemünde , † March 28, 1922 in Bremerhaven ) was a German surgeon and medical officer.

Life

As the son of a ship owner , Wieting attended grammar school in Oldenburg (Oldenburg) . After graduating from high school, he began to study medicine at the Philipps University of Marburg . At Easter 1887 he became active in the Corps Hasso-Nassovia . When he was inactive , he moved to the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . After taking the state examination in 1891, he was promoted to Dr. med. PhD . As an assistant doctor, he completed his surgical training in Hanover, Mainz and Kassel. As a medical officer in the reserve , he was an assistant in the Bremerhaven Municipal Hospital , in the gynecological clinic of the Bonn University Medical Center and in the surgery department of the new AK Eppendorf . In 1900 he went to the Second Boer War with the German Red Cross . After that, appointed him Prussian Crown to Professor . In 1902 he married the Transylvanian Mertens from Schäßburg .

Gülhane evening
Seehospital Sahlenburg

In the same year he was appointed to Constantinople by the government of the Ottoman Empire . There he taught surgery and orthopedics at the Gülhane Military Medical Academy , which Robert Rieder had founded. He published a vascular surgical procedure for the treatment of atherosclerotic gangrene , which was named after him. In 1908 he followed Georg Deycke as Medical Director and introduced the Medical Gülhane Evenings. At the same time he was an Imperial German Embassy Doctor. As an advisor to the head of the Turkish medical services, he took part in the First Balkan War in 1912/13 . In 1914 he moved into the First World War on the Turkish side , most recently as Turkish medical major general. Like his two corps student predecessors, Rieder and Deycke, he received the honorary title Pascha .

“It is not important for Turkey to wait, whether the French or the English or the Germans bring the blessing: the foreigners can only be the teachers, and even if it is of the greatest value to always have the best teachers, then it does actual work to the Turks themselves. "

- Julius Wieting

From 1915 to 1918 Wieting Pascha served as senior staff doctor in the German Army . In 1919 he became head physician at the Hamburg Lake Hospital of the Nordheim Foundation in Sahlenburg . He died at the age of 55.

Works

  • with A. Flockemann and T. Ringel: War experiences of the second German (Hamburg) ambulance of the Rothen Kreuz associations from the South African war . Leipzig 1901.
  • with Otto Hildebrand and Wilhelm Scholz: Collection of stereoscopic x-ray images from the New General Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf . Wiesbaden 1901-1903.
  • Memories from the South African war . Bremerhaven 1903.
  • Gülhane Festschrift, for the 10th anniversary of the Imperial Ottoman Teaching Hospital Gülhane . Leipzig 1909.
  • with Otto Hildebrand and Wilhelm Scholz: The human arterial system in a stereoscopic X-ray . Wiesbaden 1911.
  • Guiding principles of war surgery . Leipzig 1914.
  • with Hans Vollbrecht: military medical experience . Berlin 1914.
  • Principles of the functional after-treatment of war-surgical damage . Leipzig 1915.
  • About shot in the stomach and organizational measures . Leipzig 1916.

literature

  • Stefanie Mutz-Humrich: Prof. Dr. med. Robert Rieder (1861–1913) and his work in Turkey. His thoughts, views and ideas . Dissertation, University of Würzburg 2009 online version (PDF; 16.6 MB). In it in detail about Wieting.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 104/479.
  2. Dissertation: About meningomyelitis, with special consideration of meningomyelitis cervicalis chronica (pachymeningitis cervicalis hypertrophica)
  3. a b Obituary in the Corpszeitung der Hessen-Nassauer, No. 25, p. 186
  4. J. Wieting (1903)
  5. German Medical Weekly 29 (1908)
  6. Arın Namal: position and merits of German scientists at the Medical Faculty of Istanbul University , in Faculty of Medicine Gülhane ( Memento of 3 February 2014 Internet Archive )
  7. Festschrift (1909), p. 6