Karl Koester Explained

Honorific Prefix:Professor
Karl Koester
Birth Date:2 April 1843
Birth Place:Bad Dürkheim
Death Place:Bonn
Nationality:German
Fields:Pathology
Doctoral Advisor:Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen
Workplaces:University of Bonn

Karl Koester (born 2 April 1843 in Bad Dürkheim, died 2 December 1904 in Bonn) was a German pathologist and rector of the University of Bonn from 1898 to 1899.[1] He was professor of pathology and director of the Institute of Pathology at the University of Bonn from 1874 to 1904.[2] He held the title Geheimer Medizinalrat.

Koester studied medicine in Munich, Tübingen and Würzburg, and obtained his doctoral degree in Würzburg in 1867. His doctoral advisor and mentor was Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen, and he subsequently worked as Recklinghausen's assistant. From 1873 to 1874 he was professor of general medical pathology and anatomical pathology at the University of Giessen. He succeeded Eduard von Rindfleisch as professor of pathology at the University of Bonn in 1874.

In 1868 he published Ueber die feinere Structur der menschlichen Nabelschnur ("On the finer structure of the human umbilical cord").[3]

He became a member of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in 1880.

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Die Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität: ihre Rektoren, und berühmten Professoren, Gebr. Scheur, 1943, p. 188
  2. http://www.ukb.uni-bonn.de/42256bc8002af3e7/vwwebpagesbyid/13D201260C2FF242C125785A0039CC33 Geschichte des Instituts
  3. https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/011826502 Ueber die feinere Structur der menschlichen Nabelschnur