Paul Stenger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Stenger

Paul Karl Stenger (born November 3, 1865 in Rödgen , Siegerland , † August 4, 1940 in Berlin-Zehlendorf ) was a German medical officer, ENT doctor and university professor.

Life

From October 22, 1885 to February 14, 1890, Stenger was a member of the Medicinisch-Surgical Friedrich Wilhelm Institute in Berlin. He became a member of the Pépinière-Corps Franconia (1886) and Saxonia (1907). In December 1889 he was supported by the Friedrich-Wilhelms University in Berlin to Dr. med. PhD . From 1897 to 1902 he was at the Kaiser Wilhelms Academy. From March 1899 to January 1902 he was assigned to the ENT clinic of the Charité . Last battalion doctor in the 1st Hanoverian Infantry Regiment No. 74 , he retired from active service on March 22, 1903. In 1901 he became a member of the Berlin Masonic Lodge Zum Widder . He went to the ENT clinic of the Albertus University in Königsberg as an assistant doctor and qualified as a professor for ENT medicine in 1903 . Appointed adjunct professor on April 4, 1906 and recommended by Bernhard Heine , he headed the outpatient clinic as associate professor from 1910 . It was not until the Weimar Republic that he became a professor and director of the clinic in 1921 . Stenger's attempt to prove one-sided deafness was known . Stengers grave is located in the south-west cemetery Stahnsdorf .

Honors

Stenger's grave

Incomplete list

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 66/245; 67/104.
  2. Dissertation: About testicular tumors, following the cases operated on in the Royal Clinic in Berlin from April 1, 1883 to April 1, 1889 .