Konrad Bingold

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Konrad Bingold (born July 27, 1886 in Nuremberg ; † April 5, 1955 ) was a German internist and university professor in Munich.

Life

Bingold was the son of a businessman from Nuremberg. He attended secondary school and studied medicine at the University of Munich , where he became a member of the Corps Makaria . After the medical state examination, he completed the practical year at the Charité in Berlin. At the beginning of 1914 he came to the medical department of the hospital in Hamburg-Eppendorf, where he and his teacher Hugo Schottmüller worked on the sepsis monograph in the manual of internal medicine in 1924. In 1920 he completed his habilitation at the newly founded Hamburg University . In 1926 he became an associate professor.

In June 1929, Bingold went back to his hometown of Nuremberg as head of the 1st Medical Clinic of the City Hospital. He was dismissed in 1936 because of his evangelical baptized but "non-Aryan" wife according to the National Socialist assessment and opened his own practice. Because of this, he was also unable to accept an offer to a chair in Prague. Nevertheless, he continued his scientific research in addition to his medical practice. After the collapse of the Nazi regime in 1945, he became director of the city hospital in Nuremberg. In 1946 he refused appointments to chairs in Würzburg and Berlin . In 1947 he followed a call as director of the I. Medical University Clinic and full professor for internal medicine at the University of Munich.

literature

  • Matthias Heyn. Excursus: The Bingold Case. In: National Socialism, Naturopathy and Preventive Medicine: The New German Medicine Karl Kötschau. Diss. Med. Hannover 2000, pp. 18-22.
  • Robert Paschke : Konrad Bingold in memory . In: Deutsche Corpszeitung 56 (1955), p. 156f.

Individual evidence

  1. Horst Seithe: To the elimination of Jewish doctors in the III. rich