Rose Senger

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Rose Senger (married Rose Wolters-Senger ; born March 7, 1869 in Dirschau ; died in the 20th century ) was a German doctor .

Life

Rose Senger, who was born shortly before the founding of the German Empire as the daughter of the merchant Otto Senger (died 1902), who worked in Dirschau, attended the secondary school for girls in her hometown as well as in Danzig and Königsberg . She then completed the Königsberg teachers' seminar and passed her teacher exams there in autumn 1887. Until 1889 she worked in Königsberg as a private teacher.

From 1889 to 1890 she stayed abroad and took language lessons in England, France and Belgium. From 1890 to autumn 1893 she worked as a private tutor near Leipzig .

Senger studied art history in Rome from 1893 to October 1894, and German studies in Zurich and Bern from October 1894 to 1895 . In addition, she prepared privately for the Matura examination , which she passed in autumn 1896. From 1896 to 1902 she studied medicine in Zurich, Bern, Strasbourg and Halle an der Saale. During this period she passed preliminary exams in Zurich in 1899.

After the turn of the century, she and 21 other medical students petitioned the German Federal Council in Berlin in March 1900 with the request to create “transitional provisions for medical women of German nationality who have studied or are still studying in Switzerland .” “Due to the Transitional provisions for the medical studies of German women abroad ”Rose Senger was able to take her physics course at the University of Halle in November 1900 . There she passed her state examination or her medical doctoral examination in March 1902 and received her license to practice medicine on the 29th of the month with her dissertation on casuistry of primary small intestinal sarcomas in childhood .

According to the Hanoverian address seemed Rose singer later than 1903 as a nurse practitioner in Hannover , where she at the address Georgsplatz 1 as the first doctor ever a practice for Hanover women and paediatrics and for Obstetrics , and there is demonstrable operational until the 1911th According to other sources, Senger worked as an assistant doctor in Dresden from 1904 or only 1904 and only from 1905 to 1911 in Hanover, parallel to this from 1905 or 1906 to 1908 in Munich and - presumably only in the summer months as a bath doctor - in Bad Pyrmont . 1911 - probably also the year of her marriage - she was a resident doctor in both Hanover and Munich. In 1914 she worked as a pediatrician and gynecologist in Munich.

From 1926/27 and during the Second World War until 1943 Rose Senger-Wolters worked as a doctor in Magdeburg , her seat was at Alte Ulrichstraße 15 a . There she was possibly a victim of the heavy bombing of January 16, 1945 .

Fonts

  • On the casuistry of primary small bowel sarcomas in childhood , medical dissertation from March 29, 1902 at the University of Halle an der Saale

Rose-Senger-Strasse

BW

After the former Oststadtkrankenhaus was merged with the Siloah Clinic in Hanover from 2014 and the hospital buildings in the Hanoverian district of Groß-Buchholz were demolished, new development plans were drawn up for the area with two new access roads. For the street names, the various factions of the district council favored names after the doctors Dora Gerson and Rose Senger. The naming should also give a reference to the former hospital location.

In the course of its deliberations on June 1, 2017, the district council for the Buchholz-Kleefeld district decided unanimously to name the access road that branches off to the east from In den Sieben Stücken over the former hospital grounds, and at the same time that of Pasteurallee to give the branching western access road the name Dora-Gerson-Straße.

literature

  • Kristin Hoesch: The efforts of female doctors working in Germany to obtain a license to practice medicine from 1877–1900 , in: Medizinhistorisches Journal , Volume 30, Issue 4 (1995), Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1995, pp. 353–376; Preview via JSTOR

Web links

  • Jutta Buchin (editing), Vera Seehausen (editing): Rose Wolters-Senger, geb. Senger on the Geschichte.charite.de page of the Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, CC1 Human and Health Sciences, Institute for the History of Medicine and Ethics in Medicine

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g Jutta Buchin (editing), Vera Seehausen (editing): Rose Wolters-Senger, geb. Senger on the page geschichte.charite.de [no date; 2015?], Last accessed November 8, 2019
  2. Kristin Hoesch: The efforts of female doctors working in Germany to obtain a license to practice medicine from 1877–1900 , in: Medizinhistorisches Journal , Volume 30, Issue 4 (1995), Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1995, pp. 353–376; Preview via JSTOR
  3. a b c d e f Printed matter No. 15-1312 / 2017: Street naming in the Groß-Buchholz district , application from the state capital of Hanover to the Buchholz-Kleefeld district council from May 15, 2017, with a link to the decision of June 1, 2017 at the Page e-government.hannover-stadt.de
  4. ^ Address book, city and business manual of the royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden , Department I, Part III: Alphabetical directory of residents and trading companies , p. 1132; Digitized version of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library via the German Research Foundation
  5. Hiltrud Schroeder : Senger, Rose , in dies. (Ed.): Sophie & Co. Important women of Hanover. Biographical portraits , Fackelträger, Hannover 1991, ISBN 3-7716-1521-6 , p. 256
  6. Madeleine Buck: Groß-Buchholz / Street names at the Oststadtkrankenhaus are fixed / New buildings are being built on the site of the former Oststadtkrankenhaus ... , article on the page of the Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung from June 13th, 2017, last accessed on November 8th, 2019