Oscar de la Camp

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Oskar de la Camp (born June 10, 1871 in Hamburg , † August 17, 1925 in Freiburg im Breisgau ) was a German internist.

Life

As the son of the Hamburg businessman Theodor de la Camp and his second wife Henriette Dorothea Amanda geb. Buhrow grew up in Hamburg (1838-1911), Oscar de la Camp studied at the Kaiser-Wilhelm University of Strasbourg and the Georg-August-University of Goettingen medicine. In 1890 he became a member of the Corps Saxonia Göttingen . He moved to the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg and the University of Leipzig . In 1895 he was awarded a Dr. med. PhD. This was followed by assistantship at the Eppendorfer Hospital until 1897 . He then completed his habilitation in 1902 as an assistant in the 2nd Medical University Clinic Berlin for internal medicine . This was followed in 1906 by the associate professorship at the Friedrich-Alexander University in Erlangen . In 1907 he became full professor and director of the Erlangen Polyclinical and Pharmacological Institute and director of the children's clinic. In the same year he moved to Freiburg as head of the Freiburg Polyclinic and Pediatrics. This was followed in 1909 by the position of dean of the medical faculty and chair of internal medicine. After he had also been a founding member of the Freiburg Medical Society in 1910, he gave the lecture “Physics and Internal Medicine” at the foundation ceremony on January 17, 1911. In 1921/22 he was rector of the University of Freiburg. His focus was on physical examination methods, X-ray diagnostics and therapy, radiation sickness, tuberculosis and examination of congenital heart defects.

He married Anna Pauline Marie Cropp (1875–1947) in Hamburg on March 14, 1901. Their daughter Oda was married to Heinrich Bürkle de la Camp .

See also

Fonts

  • The need for exercise in the human heart , Freiburg im Breisgau, Speyer & Kaerner, 1921

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 85/426
  2. Dissertation: The primary carcinoma of the bile ducts .
  3. Habilitation thesis: Contribution to the physiology and pathology of diaphragmatic breathing and the heart movements dependent on it .
  4. Children's Hospital Erlangen  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.kinderklinik.uk-erlangen.de  
  5. ^ Bernhard Koerner: German gender book (Genealogical manual of civil families) . tape 171 . Starke, Limburg 1975, p. 146 .
predecessor Office successor
Karl Diehl Rector of the University of Freiburg
1921–1922
Felix Rachfahl