Ludwig Stumpf

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Ludwig Stumpf (born September 14, 1846 in Munich , † December 9, 1923 in Bad Wiessee ) was a German doctor and specialist author.

Life

He was the son of Joseph Stumpf, officer at the main royal mint and stamp office, and the elder brother of the gynecologist Max Stumpf . From 1865 to 1870 he was enrolled in medicine at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich - teacher including Anton Kranz (1799–1883) - and obtained his doctorate. med. In 1873, along with Franz Xaver Braun and Leopold Graf, he was one of the founding members of the “Legal Protection Association of Munich Doctors”.

After a short activity in the Munich war hospital in Neuberghausen in 1870, he opened a practice for obstetrics in Munich as a general practitioner. On January 1, 1885, he was appointed as the successor to Anton Kranz to the central vaccination doctor with the rank of district doctor first class. In 1896 he received the title and rank of medical councilor. As such, he retired in 1913 at his own request because of professional hostility and retired to his country house in Tegernsee. After the outbreak of war he was still working as a substitute in the local hospital. He died at the age of 77 in his country house in Tegernsee.

Stump official activity consisted in the organization and monitoring of public vaccinations in Munich and above all, according to the regulation of the smallpox vaccination by means of "animal lymph", in the - currently not yet generally recognized - obtaining this vaccine through "retro vaccines", the dispatch to the public medical officers to edit their reports and to combine them into annual reports. Since 1889, Stumpf had a vaccination facility with stables and a laboratory, which was transferred to a newly built facility in 1905.

In addition to the preparation of the annual reports of the vaccination institute, Stumpf held lectures and published articles on health insurance and infant care as well as on the education and implementation of smallpox vaccinations, their results and vaccination damage.

In 1875, Ludwig Stumpf married Luise Karoline Hermine Maria Anna Pohle, mayor's daughter from Schwerin (1847-1893). This marriage resulted in two daughters, Karoline (1876–1946) , pianist and wife of Paul Klee , and Marianne (* 1877). After his wife's death he married Maria Schneider from Munich a second time.

Fonts (selection)

  • Small medical treatises, specially reprinted from the Münchener medicinischen Wochenblatt: (in a folder). JA Finsterlin, later: JF Lehmann, Munich 1886–1899.

contains: (1) Review of the health insurance system in Munich in the past year (No. 1, 1886) (2) Medical reviews of the last Reichstag session (No. 30, 1886) (3) The delivery of Thierlymphe to the medical officers (No. 10, 1889) (4) The 16th German Medical Conference in Bonn (No. 39 and 40, 1888) (5) The 17th German Medical Conference in Braunschweig (No. 27, 1889) (6) The 18th German Medical Conference in Munich (No. 26 and 27, 1890) (7) On breeding of animal lymph (No. 5, 1898)

literature

  • Leonhard Voigt: Ludwig Stumpf , in: Münchener Medizinischen Wochenschrift 71 (1924), p. 138.
  • Malte Thießen: Immunized Society. Vaccination in Germany in the 19th and 20th centuries. Critical Studies in History, Volume 225. Vanderhoek & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2017, pp. 89, 116.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address book Munich 1861, p. 337
  2. ^ Official register of the staff and teachers, civil servants and students at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. Summer semester 1870. University printer Johann Georg Weiss, Munich 1857, p. 50, apartment: Munich, Löwengrube 3
  3. Dr. Freudenberger, Munich: 50 years of Munich doctors' legal protection association! . In: Bayerisches Ärztliches Correspondenzblatt, No. 1, 1928, p. 6
  4. ^ Eva-Maria Henig, Fritz Krafft: Smallpox vaccines in Germany. In: pharmische-zeitung.de. PZ - Pharmazeutische Zeitung, September 20, 1999, accessed on November 15, 2019 (issue 38/1999).
  5. the production of smallpox vaccine obtained from calves infected with the pustular contents of smallpox vaccinations
  6. http://www.tk-online.de/rochelexikon/ro32500/r33166.000.html
  7. The results of the protective pox vaccination in the Kingdom of Bavaria appeared from 1891 in: Münchener Medizinische Wochenschrift (MMW). Organ for official and general practitioners
  8. Communications from the German and Austrian Alpine Club. Edited by Th. Trautwein. Volume X. Year 1884. Salzburg 1884. p. 17: “Dr. In his lecture “from the Reich capital” Ludwig Stumpf gave a picture of his perceptions made at the hygiene exhibition in Berlin, insofar as these are more or less closely related to the interests and goals of the Alpine Club.
  9. married to the Munich architect Konrad Klinger
  10. (* 1864); Daughter of Adolf Schneider, university teacher, and Barbara, née Kachelriß
  11. ^ Registration documents (PMB), tax list: Munich, City Archives