Selly Askanazy

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Selly Askanazy (born September 8, 1866 in Stallupönen , † 1940 in Spain ) was a German doctor.

Life

Selly Askanazy attended the Kneiphöfische Gymnasium in Königsberg. He then studied medicine at the Albertus University in Königsberg . In 1886 he became a member of the Corps Vandalia Königsberg and later the Corps Palaio-Borussia Königsberg. After graduating as Dr. med. In 1891 he passed the state examination at the beginning of 1892 and became an assistant doctor in the university clinic. In 1897 he completed his habilitation in internal medicine. In 1907 he was appointed professor and subsequently ran a private clinic in Königsberg. During the First World War , as a volunteer, he headed the fortress auxiliary hospital II / Börsengarten department with epidemic hospital. In July 1933 he prevented the National Socialists from withdrawing the Venia Legendi by declaring a waiver. Meanwhile seriously ill, he had to give up his private clinic in 1938 because of the ban on "non-Aryan" doctors. He is believed to have died in Spain in 1940.

As an internationally known internist, Askanazy worked and published in particular in the fields of trauma medicine and blood pathology.

Fonts

  • On the regeneration of smooth muscle fibers , 1891
  • On the tumor-like occurrence of tuberculosis , 1897
  • About the water content of the blood and blood serum in circulatory disorders, nephritis, anemia and fever , 1897
  • About the differential diagnosis in anemia

literature

  • Christian Tilitzki : The Albertus University of Königsberg: Your story from the founding of the Empire to the fall of the Province of East Prussia , Volume 1: 1871–1918, pp. 493–494 ( digitized version )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Erwin Willmann (Ed.): Directory of the old Rudolstädter Corps students. (AH. List of the RSC.) , 1928 edition, No. 91