- Bernhard von Langenbeck
Bernhard Rudolf Konrad von Langenbeck (
9 November 1810 –29 September 1887 ) was a German surgeon known as the developer ofLangenbeck's amputation and founder of "Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery ".He was born at
Horneburg , and received his medical education at Göttingen, where one of his teachers was his uncleKonrad Johann Martin Langenbeck . He took his doctorate in 1835 with a thesis on the structure of theretina . After a visit toFrance andEngland , he returned to Göttingen as "Privatdozent ", and in 1842 became Professor of Surgery and Director of theFriedrichs Hospital atKiel . Six years later he succeededJohann Friedrich Dieffenbach (1794–1847) as Director of the Clinical Institute for Surgery and Ophthalmology at theCharité inBerlin , and remained there till 1882, when failing health forced him to retire. He died atWiesbaden in September 1887.Langenbeck was a bold and skillful surgeon, but preferred not to operate while other means afforded a prospect of success. He specialised in military surgery and became an authority on the treatment of
gunshot wound s. He served as general field-surgeon of the army in theFirst Schleswig War in 1848 and saw active service in theSecond Schleswig War in 1864, theAustro-Prussian War in 1866, and theFranco-Prussian War of 1870-71. He was inOrleans at the end of 1870 after the city had been taken by the Prussians and in his capacity as surgeon or as consultant tended to the wounded men with whom every public building was packed. He also utilized the opportunities for instruction that thus arose, and theMilitär-ärztliche Gesellschaft , which met twice a week for some months, and in the discussions of which every surgeon in the city, irrespective of nationality, was invited to take part, was mainly formed by his energy and enthusiasm. He was ennobled for his services in theDanish War of 1864 .References
*1911|article=Bernhard Rudolf Konrad von Langenbeck
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.