Rudolf Degkwitz
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Rudolf_Degkwitz an entity of type: Thing
Rudolf Degkwitz (* 19. Januar 1889 in Ronneburg; † 21. Mai 1973 in Emmendingen) war ein deutscher Ordinarius für Kinderheilkunde. Er war einer der führenden und international anerkannten Kinder- und Tuberkuloseärzte mit besonderen Verdiensten im Bereich der Immunologie, besonders der TBC-Forschung. 1944 wurde er wegen seiner Kritik am NS-Regime denunziert und vom Volksgerichtshof zu sieben Jahren Zuchthaus verurteilt. Nach dem Krieg setzte er sich für die Bestrafung und Suspendierung von Ärzten ein, die am Euthanasieprogramm beteiligt waren. Er blieb damit erfolglos, weshalb er 1948 in die USA auswanderte.
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz (19 January 1889, in Ronneburg – 21 May 1973, in Emmendingen) was a German physician, an early member of the Nazi Party and a participant in the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch. He was acquainted with Rudolf Hess and became involved with the Nazi Party in the early 1920s. He took part in Nazi political discussions in Munich and befriended Adolf Hitler. In 1923 he became a member of the Nazi Party, and he took part in the Beer Hall Putsch in November 1923. He eventually left the Nazi Party, but unsuccessfully applied in 1933 and 1937 to become a member again. He signed the Loyalty Oath of German Professors to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialist State in 1933.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz (senior)
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz
xsd:date
1973-05-21
xsd:date
1889-01-19
xsd:integer
50509432
xsd:integer
1113462019
xsd:date
1889-01-19
xsd:date
1973-05-21
rdf:langString
Physician
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz (* 19. Januar 1889 in Ronneburg; † 21. Mai 1973 in Emmendingen) war ein deutscher Ordinarius für Kinderheilkunde. Er war einer der führenden und international anerkannten Kinder- und Tuberkuloseärzte mit besonderen Verdiensten im Bereich der Immunologie, besonders der TBC-Forschung. 1944 wurde er wegen seiner Kritik am NS-Regime denunziert und vom Volksgerichtshof zu sieben Jahren Zuchthaus verurteilt. Nach dem Krieg setzte er sich für die Bestrafung und Suspendierung von Ärzten ein, die am Euthanasieprogramm beteiligt waren. Er blieb damit erfolglos, weshalb er 1948 in die USA auswanderte.
rdf:langString
Rudolf Degkwitz (19 January 1889, in Ronneburg – 21 May 1973, in Emmendingen) was a German physician, an early member of the Nazi Party and a participant in the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch. He was acquainted with Rudolf Hess and became involved with the Nazi Party in the early 1920s. He took part in Nazi political discussions in Munich and befriended Adolf Hitler. In 1923 he became a member of the Nazi Party, and he took part in the Beer Hall Putsch in November 1923. He eventually left the Nazi Party, but unsuccessfully applied in 1933 and 1937 to become a member again. He signed the Loyalty Oath of German Professors to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialist State in 1933. Degkwitz was a professor at the University of Greifswald from 1925, and at the University of Hamburg from 1932. He eventually became critical of some aspects of Nazism, especially child euthanasia in Nazi Germany. In 1944 he was convicted by the People's Court of subversion of national defense and sentenced to seven years imprisonment. The court however lauded his medical work, and therefore did not sentence him to death. After the war he briefly resumed his medical work in Germany, but after a conflict with his employer he emigrated to the United States and worked in the private sector. He moved back to Germany shortly before his death in 1973.In the 30's he wrote his Treatise on Pediatrics assisted by doctors A. Eckstein, E. Freudenmberg, H. Brühl, F. Goebel where he shows in his chapters that he was an expert in pediatric infections (1).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
2782
xsd:gYear
1889
xsd:gYear
1973