Ottomar Domrich

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ottomar Domrich (born April 22, 1819 in Oldisleben , † April 1, 1907 in Meiningen ) was a German medic .

Life

Ottomar Domrich studied medicine at the universities of Jena and Würzburg from 1837 and received his doctorate in Jena in 1842 with his dissertation de oesophagi strictura . Then he was first an assistant doctor at the United hospitals in Jena before settling in 1845 as a private mental illness, psychological anthropology, general pathology and physiology in Jena habilitated . In 1846 he was appointed director of the Physiological Institute in Jena. In 1848 he became an associate professor and in 1854 a full honorary professor.

In 1856, Ottomar Domrich was appointed head of the Georgen Hospital and personal physician to the Duke of Saxony-Meiningen in Meiningen, was appointed medical councilor and court counselor and was included in the medical deputation of the ducal government. Domrich was appointed chief medical officer in 1866 and privy councilor in 1883.

Ottomar Domrich was co-editor of the Jenaische Annalen für Physiologie und Medizin from 1849 to 1851 .

On November 1, 1848, he was accepted into the Leopoldina as a member (matriculation no. 1592) with the academic surname Eberhard Schmidt .

Since September 19, 1859 he was married to Maria Helena, born von Hase (born August 3, 1832 in Jena), a daughter of the theologian Karl von Hase .

Fonts

  • Dissertatio inauguralis medica de esophagi strictura . Jena 1842 ( digitized version )
  • with Heinrich Haeser : negotiations of German university teachers on the reform of the German universities in the assembly in Jena from September 21 to 24, 1848 . Frommann, Jena 1848 ( digitized version )
  • The mental states, their organic mediation and their effect in the production of physical illnesses . Mauke, Jena 1849 ( digitized version )

literature

  • Alma Kreuter: German-speaking neurologists and psychiatrists: a biographical-bibliographical lexicon from the forerunners to the middle of the 20th century. 3 volumes. KG Saur, Munich 1996, ISBN 3-598-11196-7 , vol. 1, p 258. Digitalisat

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Daniel Ferdinand Neigebaur : History of the Imperial Leopoldino-Carolinian German Academy of Natural Scientists during the second century of its existence. Friedrich Frommann, Jena 1860, p. 274 digitized