Karl Gottlob Prince

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Karl Gottlob Prinz (born December 19, 1795 in Dresden ; † November 18, 1848 there ) was a German veterinarian.

Life

Karl Gottlob Prinz was born the son of a master locksmith in Dresden. His parents died early, so that he was an orphan in the house of his uncle Dr. Grew up nicely.

He attended what was then the Collegium medico-chirurgicum in Dresden, which was transformed into a surgical-medical academy in 1815 in order to become a military doctor. Due to the great lack of military doctors, he became a field surgeon in the military hospital in Torgau as early as 1812 . As a field surgeon, he accompanied the Saxon army to France during the Wars of Liberation in 1813 and returned to Dresden in 1816. He then continued his medical studies at the Surgical Medical Academy. He combined his medical studies with a visit to the veterinary school associated with the academy . At the veterinary school he was also employed as a repetiteur and prosector .

In 1821 he undertook a scientific trip with state support for further in-depth training. The journey took him via Berlin , Hanover , the stud farms in Celle and Hoya to Hamburg and Kiel . From there he continued the journey to Copenhagen in Denmark . In Copenhagen he lived in the house of the Council of State Professor Erik Nissen Viborg (* April 5, 1759; † September 25, 1822), who was then the head of the veterinary school there, and met Professor Ludwig Levin Jacobson during his six-month study there. In March 1822 he continued his journey to England , coming from York and Newcastle to Edinburgh and London . He later judged his stay in England and Scotland to be very disappointing, but his stay in Denmark was the most fruitful time for his veterinary training. In July 1822 he arrived in Paris in France and was accepted as élève étranger ("foreign student") in Maisons-Alfort at the veterinary school École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort . From there he visited the cities of Marseille , Montpellier , Toulouse and Bordeaux . After he had passed his exams at the École nationale vétérinaire d'Alfort, he was awarded the degree of medecin veterinaire in the fall of 1823. In February 1824 he returned to Dresden via Vienna , Munich and Stuttgart .

In April 1824 he became professor of practical animal medicine as well as district veterinarian for the Meissen district and veterinarian of the Lohmen and Rennersdorf regular sheep farms and the royal stables . In 1826 he was promoted to doctor of medicine.

In May 1829 he accompanied the country stable master to Schönberg , Schwerin , Lübeck , Eutin and Kiel. In 1835 he made a trip to Heligoland and in 1844 there was a scientific trip to Sweden and Denmark. In 1845 he accompanied the commission sent by the Russian government to the interior of Russia to investigate the cattle epidemics occurring there, their origin, character, prevention and treatment. The veterinarians Georg Christian With (born February 5, 1796 in Bedstedt in the Aabenraa; † September 15, 1861 in Frederiksborg) and Carl Heinrich Hertwig also took part in this trip . The journey led from St. Petersburg to Moscow and via Voronezh to Yekaterinoslav and Bessarabia . With Kishinev the furthest point of the journey was reached. The return journey took them back to St. Petersburg via Podolia and Volhynia . Karl Gottlob Prinz arrived back in Dresden on February 9, 1846.

Works

  • The rabid in the dog's tongue, represented as a muscular apparatus. Hanover University of Veterinary Medicine Dresden around 1824.
  • Letter from Karl Gottlob Prinz to Jean-Baptiste Huzard. Dresden, June 15, 1827.
  • General doctrine of diseases and healing of domestic animals. Dresden PG Hilscher'sche Buchhandlung 1830.
  • The fury of the dogs as a plague . Publishing house by Leopold Voss. Leipzig 1832.
  • Letter from Karl Gottlob Prinz to Constantin Karl von Falkenstein (1801–1855). Sl, March 16, 1833.
  • Practical treatise on the regeneration of protective pox lymph by transferring it to cattle and other domestic animals capable of vaccination. Dresden, in Walther'schen Hofbuchhandlung, 1839.
  • Handbook of the special pathology and therapy of the larger usable domestic mammals: or a general comprehensible and scientific presentation of the phenomena, characteristics, causes, predictions, cures and preconceptions of their internal diseases, with special consideration of the epidemics: an auxiliary book for lectures for teachers of practical veterinary studies, see above as for self-teaching for state doctors, police officers, veterinarians and educated economists . Leipzig: Verlag von Robert Friese, 1839–1841.
  • Handbook of the special pathology and therapy of the larger usable domestic mammals, end of reproductive diseases and diseases of animal life / with the assistance of Mr. Karl Gottlob Prinz . Leipzig: Friese, 1841.
  • Hoplometry, or shoeing: with special consideration of the procedure recommended by the French regimental veterinarian Riquet; plus an appendix: The shoeing without nails . Dresden Walther 1843.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. German biography: Prinz, Karl Gottlob - German biography. Retrieved September 29, 2017 .
  2. ^ New Nekrolog der Deutschen, p. 714 . Voigt, 1850 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2017]).
  3. GW Schrader: Biographical-literary lexicon of veterinarians of all times and countries, as well as the Matur researcher, physicians, farmers, stable masters, etc., who have rendered outstanding services to veterinary medicine, p. 332. Med. Dir. Eduard Hering, accessed on 29. September 2017 .
  4. Dr. Karl Gottlob Prinz: General disease and healing theory of domestic animals. 1830, Retrieved September 29, 2017 .
  5. Carl Gottlob Prinz: The fury of the dogs as a plague: According to own observations described f. Doctors, veterinarians, police authorities and dog lovers: With col. Kupfertaf . Voss, 1832 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2017]).