From Four-Bed Clinic to Modern Eye Hospital:☆
Ophthalmology in Leipzig, 1820–1996
Abstract
The opening of the “Heilanstalt für arme Augenkranke” by Friedrich Philipp Ritterich (1782–1866) in 1820 was an important landmark for ophthalmology in Leipzig and in all of Germany. The first chair of ophthalmology in Germany was taken by Christian Georg Theodor Ruete in 1852. In 1883 the clinic moved to a new domicile, a modern building in the Leipzig “medical quarter.” In the ensuing years, the hospital developed into a well-known university center of ophthalmology with the scientific, clinical, and organizational work of ophthalmologists such as Hubert Sattler and Ernst Hertel. The extension of the old building in 1908–1911 and the rebuilding after the destruction in World War II created better opportunities for research, teaching, and patient treatment. Comprehensive expansion and reconstruction of the Eye Hospital since 1994 has created excellent conditions for both clinical and experimental ophthalmology as well as the training of students.
Keywords: history of ophthalmology, Leipzig Eye Hospital, University of Leipzig
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☆ A more extensive history of Leipzig Eye Hospital is available (Fahrenbach S, Wiedemann P: Ophthalmology in Leipzig: From the Hospital for Poor Eye Patients to the Modern University Eye Clinic) Leipzig: Leipziger Universitatsverlag, 1996.
PII: S0039-6257(99)00098-3
© 1999 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.
