Philipp Knoll

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Philipp Carl Knoll (born July 4, 1841 in Karlsbad , Bohemia , † January 31, 1900 in Vienna ) was an Austrian pathologist in Prague and Vienna.

Life

He was the son of the Karlsbad citizen and trader Joseph Knoll and his wife Aloysia geb. Gegenbauer and was baptized a Catholic on July 8, 1841. Knoll studied medicine at the German University in Prague . He was one of the founders of the Corps Teutonia. He was promoted to Dr. med. PhD . In 1869 he completed his habilitation at the Hessian Ludwig University for anatomy and physiology . After returning to Prague in 1872 he became associate professor and in 1879 professor for general and experimental pathology. He founded the Society for the Promotion of German Science, Art and Literature in Bohemia and resolutely represented the national division of Prague University. When it took place in 1882, he was a member of the college of professors at the German Karl Ferdinand University. In 1883/84 and 1887/88 he was dean of the medical faculty and in 1890/91 rector of the German university. From 1883 he sat as a member of the Bohemian state parliament . In 1896 he was appointed councilor . In 1898 he followed the call of the University of Vienna . He died in office at the age of 59.

Works

  • About the influence of the cervical marrow on the heart rate . 1872.
  • About the consequences of cardiac compression . Prague 1881.
  • About Germanness in Prague and its current situation . Lecture on March 20, 1883 at the German Association in Prague.
  • About the pressure fluctuations in the cerebrospinal fluid and the change in the blood supply of the central nervous system . Vienna 1886.
  • About interrelationships between the large and small circuits . Vienna 1890.
  • About protoplasm-poor and protoplasm-rich muscles . Vienna 1891.
  • Contributions to domestic contemporary history . Prague 1900.

See also

literature

  • Knoll Philipp. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 3, Publishing House of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna 1965, p. 447 f. (Direct links on p. 447 , p. 448 ).
  • Hofmeister: Philipp Knoll 1841–1900 . Archives for Experimental Pathology and Pharmacology 44 (1900), pp. 1-5.
  • A. Huttmann: The history of the institute for general and experimental pathology as well as the propaedeutic clinic of the German university in Prague . Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift 102 (1990), pp. 161-171.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Adolf Siegl : The suspended corps of the Prager SC - Teutonia 1861–1869 . Once and Now, Yearbook of the Association for Corps Student History Research, Vol. 21 (1976), pp. 134-136.
  2. ^ Habilitation thesis: Contributions to the physiology of the four hills .