Bernhard Naunyn

Bernhard Naunyn ( born September 2, 1839 in Berlin, † July 26, 1925 ) was a German internist and high school teachers.

Life

As the son of the Berlin Mayor Franz Christian Naunyn Naunyn visited the Friedrichwerdersche school. After graduation, he studied medicine at the Rheinische Friedrich- Wilhelms- University of Bonn and the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin. In 1858 he was Corp. loop carrier of Hansea Bonn. In 1863 he passed the state examination.

After one year's voluntary year in the Prussian army, he went to Theodor Frerichs in the Charité, where he habilitated in 1867. Out of a general practitioner in Berlin, in 1869 he followed the call of the University of Dorpat as professor of clinical therapy. In 1871 he moved to the University of Bern and in 1873 to the Albertus University of Königsberg as a successor to the internist Ernst von Leyden. With a one-semester break, he was from 1884 to 1886 Vice-Rector of the Albertina. In the three years emperors, he emerged the successor to Adolf Kußmauls to the Kaiser- Wilhelms- University of Strasbourg.

During World War I, he led the military hospital of Baden- Baden. He was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class on white gang. After the war he retired from Hansea.

Publisher

With the pharmacologist Oswald Schmiedeberg and the pathologist Edwin Klebs, he founded the Archives of Experimental Pathology and Pharmacology ( from Vol 158: Naunyn - Schmiedeberg's Archives of Experimental Pathology and Pharmacology, 1972: Naunyn - Schmiedeberg 's Archives of Pharmacology ), Leipzig, later Berlin, 1873 et seq, the first German journal of pharmacology as an independent experimental science. For a time he taught at the Kaiser- Wilhelms- University of Strasbourg, where he guided them Oskar Minkowski. From 1886 he published the new releases from the border areas of medicine and surgery in the Gustav Fischer Verlag with Johann von Mikulicz. In the spirit of positivism, he said:

" Medical science should be, or they will not be. "

118934
de