Veit Solbrig

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Veit Solbrig (born September 17, 1843 in Fürth ; † September 9, 1915 in Munich ) was a German doctor and specialist author .

Life

Veit Solbrig was a son of Karl August von Solbrig (1809–1872), “lunatic doctor”, professor and director of the district insane asylum in Munich, and his wife Ida, geb. New burner. In 1861 he passed the Abitur examination at the Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich , among others with Philipp Brunner and Hermann Dietz . He then began studying medicine at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , where he became a member of the Corps Franconia . In 1867 he completed his studies with a doctorate to become Dr. med. from. In his thesis, he analyzed and described his 1864 and again in 1865 at autopsies had moved infection with cadaveric poison . A younger brother, August Solbrig (1846–1913), like father and brother, also turned to medicine.

After temporarily working as a battalion doctor in the 3rd Mounted Artillery Regiment in Munich, he was appointed first class assistant doctor and medical officer in 1876, senior medical officer in 1886 and first class medical officer in the war ministry in 1889. In 1895 he was transferred as chief physician to the garrison hospital "while exercising the divisional medical function" in the 1st Division, in 1896 he worked as a regimental physician in the 1st Heavy Rider Regiment, in 1899 he was promoted to corps physician in the 1st Army Corps and appointed general physician. In 1900 he retired.

In 1889 Veit Solbrig received citizenship in Munich. As a passionate cellist since his school days, he initiated a chamber music group, whose members included Max von Schillings . Friendly relationships also existed with contemporary composers and conductors such as Hermann Levi , Richard Wagner , Franz Lachner , Julius Weismann and Franz Wüllner . His musical collection of approx. 600 volumes was acquired by the Palatinate State Library in 1928 from the estate. Hans Thomas' painting from 1886, “Amor spies the lovers”, also came from Solbrig's possession ; it was in a Munich art auction in 2019.

Solbrig was buried in the north cemetery in Munich. Adolf von Hildebrand , with whom Solbrig was friends, designed his grave monument with the figure of a cello player, which was completed in 1921.

family

In 1868 he married the businessman's daughter Antonie Anna Mathilde Rosipal (1848–1927), daughter of Carl Michael Rosipal, royal Spanish consul in Munich, and Karolina 'Emilia' Klara, née Strobäus. The marriage resulted in three daughters - Antoinette (* 1870; married in 1893 to Alfred Wagner (1866–1929), officer), Ida (* 1873) and Irene (* 1879; married to Gustav von Droste-Hülshoff, engineer) and a son Hermann (* 1886).

Awards

Fonts

  • Angina diphtheritica. An introspection. Dissertatio inauguralis. Printed by: JG Weiss, Munich 1867.
  • 100 croupous pneumonia (from the K. Garrisonslazarethe Munich) , in: Festschrift dedicated to the Munich Medical Association to celebrate its 50th anniversary by its members. M. Rieger, Munich 1883, pp. 218-234.

swell

  • Personnel file: BayHStA, officer personnel files 12449

literature

  • 200 semesters of Munich francs . [Munich 1936]. P. 173f. (No. 310)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Annual report on the k. Maximiliansgymnasium in Munich for the school year 1860/61, p. 12; P. 31: Solbrig excelled in the upper class in playing the cello
  2. Abitur at Maximiliansgymnasium 1865; Medical studies; Medical Council in Munich
  3. Police registration documents (PMB), "Solbrig, Veit": Munich, City Archives
  4. Florian Sattler (Ed.): Adolf Hildebrand und seine Welt, p. 81, note 79
  5. ^ The music collection in the LBZ / Palatinate State Library, in: Anette Gerlach (Hrsg.): LBZ Annual Report 2003, p. 23 (online)
  6. https://www.kettererkunst.de  ›art› details
  7. ^ Draft (5 sheets, 16 photos, 1 archive) in the Architekturmuseum der Technische Hochschule München , Arcisstr. 21, 80333 Munich ( https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/928929 )
  8. ^ Sigrid Esche-Braunfels: Adolf von Hildebrand. Deutscher Verlag für Kunstwissenschaft, Berlin 1993, p. 418, fig. 675