Ludolf Penkert

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carl Ludolf Penkert (born December 20, 1844 in Sangerhausen , † May 1, 1904 in Merseburg ) was a German doctor and government official , most recently as the royal Prussian government and secret medical councilor of the district government of the Prussian province of Saxony .

Life

After studying medicine at the University of Greifswald , where he received his doctorate in 1867 , Penkert served as a military doctor in the medical corps of the royal Prussian army . As such, he took part in the Franco-German War in 1870/71. On January 19, 1875, he was retired from active service in the army as a second class assistant doctor in the reserve and settled as a general practitioner in Artern . He worked part-time as a military doctor in the 1st Thuringian Landwehr Regiment No. 31, where he is listed as a medical officer in 1881 .

As early as 1874, Penkert was given the provisional administration of the district doctor's office in the Sangerhausen district. In 1876, Penkert was finally appointed a regular doctor of the district of Sangerhausen, leaving his place of residence in Artern . He is also listed as such in the Handbook of the Prussian Province of Saxony from 1877. During this time, Penkert was also a real member of the General Medical Association of Thuringia. In 1881 Penkert took part as a member and participant of the 54th Assembly of German Naturalists and Doctors in Salzburg . Penkert was instrumental in founding the Arterner Hospital, of which he was the first doctor.

In 1889 Penkert was given the office of district physician of the Merseburg district , with which he moved his residence to the capital of the Prussian province of Saxony. As a district physician, he was active until 1895 with the rank and title of a royal Prussian medical council. In the same year he was appointed head of department with the rank and title of a royal Prussian government and secret medical council in the district government of the province of Saxony. As such, he also reported to the Minister of Spiritual Education and Medical Affairs of the Prussian government in Berlin , so u. a. in a letter dated March 26, 1903. He held office in the district government in Merseburg until his death.

Penkert died of a sudden heart attack at the age of 60 . The family grave is preserved in the St. Maximi city cemetery in Merseburg.

Fonts (selection)

  • Brief instructions on how to look at the trichinae . For teaching and repetition , Merseburg, Verlag von Friedrich Stollberg, 1893,

family

Ludolf Penkert was born with Anna Haussknecht (born February 7, 1852, † February 18, 1912 in Merseburg) married. The couple had three children:

literature

  • Jurisprudence and Medical Legislation , Volume 1, Fischer'smedizin. Buchhandlung H. Kornfeld., 1904, snippet view on Google Books, p. 339

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gerhard August von Witzleben : Militair-Wochenblatt 1875 , 60th year, Berlin 1875, digitized on Google Books, p. 155
  2. Seniority list of officers of the Royal Prussian Army and the XIII. (Royal Württemberg Army Corps 1881 , snippet view on Google Books, p. 545
  3. ^ Official Journal of the Government of Merseburg 1874 , digitized version on Google Books, p. LXXV f.
  4. CF Kunze: German Journal for Practical Medicine , Volume 3, Leipzig 1876, digitized version on Google Books, p. 96
  5. ^ Handbook of the Province of Saxony 1877 , Magdeburg 1877, digitized version on Google Books, p. 218
  6. ^ L- Pfeiffer: Correspondence sheets of the General Medical Association of Thuringia , Volume 3, Leipzig 1874, digitized on Google Books, p. 279
  7. ^ Hermann Pick: Tageblatt of the Assembly of German Natural Scientists and Doctors , Volume 54, Salzburg 1881, digitized on Google Books, p. XVII
  8. Schmölling, Andreas: On the early history of the Arterner Hospital and the first hospital doctor Dr. Ludolf Penkert in: Journal of the Association for Local Lore , History and Protection , Artern ev ARATORA, Volume 14
  9. German medical weekly , Volume 15, Georg Thieme Verlag 1889, snippet view on Google Books, p. 164
  10. ^ Journal for School Health Care : Supplement, Volume 9, L. Voss, 1896, Snippet view on Google Books, p. 54
  11. Heather Wolffram: The Stepchildren of Science: Psychical Research and Parapsychology in Germany , C. 1870-1939, Rodopi, 2009, excerpt from Google Books, p. 127f.
  12. ^ Front page on AbeBooks
  13. Information from the family grave in the St. Maximi city cemetery in Merseburg
  14. record in the German Digitzalen library, accessed on February 24, 2019
  15. ^ Address book Merseburg 1940, digitized on Genwiki, accessed on February 24, 2019
  16. Ludolf Penkert: The duty of obedience of the state official against illegal orders of superiors and his liability to third parties arising from their execution , Greifswald 1911, title page on AbeBooks
  17. Record on MyHeritage, accessed February 24, 2019
  18. Flood of the Elbe around the Bleicherhütte near Bleckede , painted around 1912. Oil on canvas, description on zvab.com

Web links