Rudolph Hobein

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Rudolph Hobein , also Rudolf Hobein , completely Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Rudolph Hobein (born April 23, 1852 in Schwerin , † after 1918, probably in Hildesheim ) was a German military doctor, most recently a general doctor .

Life

Rudolph Hobein was a son of the Schwerin lawyer Eduard Hobein from his first marriage to Henriette, geb. Weber. He attended the Gymnasium Fridericianum Schwerin and from Easter 1872 studied human medicine at the universities of Rostock and Würzburg . In Würzburg, he was in 1876 with one of Carl Jakob Adolf Christian Gerhardt supervised dissertation on observations on sound level change at Lungencavernen to Dr. med. PhD.

From 1876 he worked as a military assistant doctor in Schwerin. For his senior military medical examination, he examined epidemic jaundice in the army. In 1879 he was transferred to the 1st Grand Ducal Mecklenburg Dragoon Regiment No. 17 in Ludwigslust . In 1884/1885 he was the chief physician at Bethlehem Abbey .

In 1885 he temporarily returned to civilian life as a medical officer à la suite for the medical corps and moved to Schwerin. In 1887 he was reactivated as a battalion doctor in the Colberg Grenadier Regiment "Graf Gneisenau" (2nd Pomeranian) No. 9 in Stargard in Pomerania . Here, at the suggestion of Robert Koch , he undertook research to determine whether the substances used for undergarments show a significant difference when worn on the skin in the ability to absorb microorganisms and which properties of the substances it are that increase this ability. zoom out. He published the results in 1890 in the magazine for hygiene . Together with the promotion to the senior staff doctor 2nd class, he was transferred to the foot artillery regiment "von Hindersin" (1st Pomeranian) No. 2 . On April 30, 1898, he became senior staff doctor, 1st class. In 1906 he was transferred to the infantry regiment "von Voigts-Rhetz" (3rd Hannoversches) No. 79 in Hildesheim as a regimental doctor. In 1912 he passed with the character of senior physician general.

During the First World War he was reactivated and directed reserve hospitals in Oldenburg and Hanover. On January 27, 1917, he received the patent for his rank. In retirement he lived in Hildesheim.

Since 1880 he was married to Luise Dora Auguste, b. Sieburg (* 1858 in Hanover ).

Awards

Fonts

  • Observations on changes in sound level in lung caverns. Schwerin: Hilb 1876, plus dissertation Würzburg ( digitized version )
  • Microorganisms in undergarments. In: Zeitschrift für Hygiene 9 (1890), pp. 218-234

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the Rostock matriculation portal
  2. ^ Adolf Hecker, Richard W. Otto: Contributions to the theory of the so-called "Weil's disease". Berlin: Springer 1911, p. 34
  3. German military medical journal. 46 (1917), p. 93
  4. ^ German military medical journal 29 (1900), p. 80