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  1. Apr 5, 2024 · Johann Lukas Schönlein (born Nov. 30, 1793, Bamberg [Germany]—died Jan. 23, 1864, Bamberg) was a German physician whose attempts to establish medicine as a natural science helped create modern methods for the teaching and practice of clinical medicine. A professor of medicine at the universities of Würzburg (1824–33), Zürich (1833–40 ...

  2. Schönl. Johann Lukas Schönlein (30 November 1793 – 23 January 1864) was a German naturalist, and professor of medicine, born in Bamberg. He studied medicine at Landshut, Jena, Göttingen, and Würzburg. After teaching at Würzburg and Zurich, he was called to Berlin in 1839, where he taught therapeutics and pathology. [2]

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  4. Jan 1, 2017 · Schönlein was one of the pioneers of scientific medicine, introducing physical and chemical methods into clinical practice and stressing the importance of natural science in medicine. He called this for the methodological school of natural history (die naturhistorische Schule).

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  5. Johann Lukas Schönlein oder Johann Lucas Schönlein, geboren als Johann Schönlein, war ein deutscher Mediziner, Internist und Pathologe, Hochschullehrer, Medizinhistoriker, Mäzen und Paläobotaniker. Sein offizielles botanisches Autorenkürzel lautet „Schönl.“ Schönlein steht für die Wende vom naturphilosophischen zum ...

  6. Feb 8, 2021 · Johann Lukas Schönlein Source: Universität Würzburg. * November 30, 1793 in Bamberg. † January 23, 1864 in Bamberg. After studying science and medicine in Landshut and Würzburg, Johann Lukas Schönlein did his doctorate at the JMU in 1816.

  7. Jan 9, 2022 · Home LITFL Eponym. Johann Lukas Schönlein (1793-1864) was a German physician. Regarded as one of the most prominent doctors and clinicians in Germany during the period following the Napoleonic wars in Germany (1815- 1858). Schönlein was the personal physician to king Frederick Willian IV.

  8. Click to Enlarge. Johann Lukas Schoenlein (1793-1864) earned a medical degree in Wurzburg in 1816. He served as Professor of Medicine in Wurzburg from 1824-33, Zürich from 1834-40, and Berlin from 1840-59. He described the cutaneous and arthritic symptoms of “Schoenlein’s Disease” in 1841.

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