Tobias Czaschel

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Tobias Czaschel , also Tobias Tschaschelius, (* approx. 1621 in Lauban , Upper Lusatia ; † December 25, 1681 in Vienna ) was a Silesian- Austrian physician , personal physician and dean of the medical faculty in Vienna.

Life

Czaschel studied medicine in Vienna. In 1639/40 he first acquired the baccalaureate, on January 15, 1642 he received his doctorate in medicine. Czaschel became a quarter doctor in Wiener Neustadt in 1656. In 1661/62 he was first dean of the medical faculty in Vienna. On 20 December 1668 he was imperial body Medicus Leopold I . He received the vacated position from Christian Rechberger, who in turn moved in October 1668 to the position of the Protomedicus that had become vacant through the death of the first Leibmedicus Rumoldus van der Borcht (approx. 1624–1668). Czaschel campaigned for the Academiea naturae curosorum (" Leopoldina ") with the emperor since 1675 , published articles in their "Ephemeris" and was finally accepted on March 4, 1679 with the nickname Aesculapius I as a member. In 1672/73 he again held the office of dean of the medical faculty in Vienna. He died in Vienna and was buried "with considerable pomp". Friedrich Ferdinand Illmer de Wartenberg was his successor as the imperial body medic .

Czaschel's first marriage to Anna Barbara, geb. Budterigin, married who died in 1667. His second wife was Maria Elisabeth, geb. Hallerin, whom he married on August 27, 1667. She died in 1685. From this marriage a daughter was born, who in 1686 married the imperial treasurer Hans Jakob Freiherrn von Kriechbaum.

Publications

  • 1668 articles in Johann Zwelfers (1618–1668) Pharmacopoeia Regia and Discursus apologeticus , Vienna.
  • Johann Daniel Major, Tobias Czaschel, Heinrich Volgnad: De Inventis a Se Thermis Artificialibus Succinatis ad praecipuos quosdam duos in Sacro Ro. Imperio Medicos, epistola praeliminaris; Kiliae Holsatorum, Reumann 1680 (14 sheets).
  • Ephemeris I 3 ( Leopoldina )

literature

  • D. Christian Franz Paullini: From a fresh currant brought from the womb on the ear ; "A similar case of a new-born child who brought fresh strawberry into the world", tells the imperial personal physician, D. Tobias Czaschel, in: Der Römisch = Imperial Academy of Natural Scientists Exquisite Medicinic = Surgical = Anatomic = Chymic = and Botanical Treatises , Nineteenth part with coppers, Nuremberg, published by Wolfgang Schwarzkopf, 1770; here CLXXXV perception p. 306.
  • Dr. J. Graetzer, Royal. Secret medical adviser and hospital doctor in charge : Life pictures of outstanding Silesian doctors from the last four centuries , printed and published by S. Schottländer, Breslau 1889, Tobias Czaschel p. 208.
  • Ralf Bröer: Court medicine. Structures of medical care in an early modern royal court using the example of the Viennese imperial court (1650–1750) , habilitation thesis History of Medicine (Professor Wolfgang U. Eckart ), Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg , 2006, p. 71, p. 78, p. 287 , P. 492, p. 495 + 496.
  • Marion Mücke and Thomas Schnalke : Briefnetz Leopoldina. The correspondence of the German Academy of Natural Scientists around 1750 , de Gruyter Berlin 2009, p. 20.
  • Johann Daniel Ferdinand Neigebaur : History of the imperial Leopoldino-Carolinische German academy of natural scientists during the second century of its existence. Friedrich Frommann, Jena 1860, p. 193 .

Individual evidence

  1. Member entry by Tobias Czaschel at the German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina , accessed on April 18, 2017.