Walter von Brunn

Walter Albert Ferdinand Brunn (2 September 1876, in Göttingen 21 December 1952, in Leipzig) was a German surgeon and historian of medicine.

He studied medicine at the universities of Göttingen and Rostock, where he was a student of Carl Garré. From 1900 to 1905 he served as a surgical assistant in the university clinics at Berlin and Marburg, and afterwards opened a private surgical practice in Rostock. As a hospital physician during World War I, he lost an arm as the result of a septic infection, thus ending his career as a surgeon.[1][2]

In 1919 he obtained his habilitation with a thesis on the medieval surgeon Guy de Chauliac, and in 1924 became an associate professor at the University of Rostock. From 1934 to 1950 he was a professor of the history of medicine at the University of Leipzig.[2][3]

From 1934 to 1950 he was director of the Karl Sudhoff-Institut für Geschichte der Medizin und der Naturwissenschaften (Karl Sudhoff Institute for the History of Medicine and Natural Sciences) at Leipzig. From 1947 to 1951 he was vice-president of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina.[3]

Selected works

  • Von den Gilden der Barbiere und Chirurgen in den Hansestädten, 1921 On the guilds of barbers and surgeons in the Hanseatic towns.
  • Kurze Geschichte der Chirurgie, 1928 Brief history of surgery.
  • Paracelsus und seine Schwindsuchtlehre, 1941 Paracelsus and tuberculosis teaching.
  • Medizinische Zeitschriften im neunzehnten Jahrhundert (posthumous, 1963) Medical journals in the nineteenth century.[4]

References

  1. Brunn, Walter Albert Ferdinand von at Neue Deutsche Biographie
  2. Prof. Dr. med. Walter Albert Ferdinand Brunn Catalogus Professorum Lipsiensium
  3. Brunn, Walter von in Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium
  4. Braungart - Busta / edited by Lutz Hagestedt Deutsche Literatur-Lexicon
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