Bernhard Fischer-Wasels

Professor
Bernhard Fischer-Wasels
Born Bernhard Fischer
January 25, 1877
Atsch near Stolberg (Rhineland)
Died December 23, 1941 (aged 64)
Frankfurt am Main
Nationality German
Occupation Physician and anatomical pathologist
Employer Goethe University Frankfurt

Bernhard Fischer-Wasels (born 25 January 1877 in Atsch near Stolberg (Rhineland), died 23 December 1941 in Frankfurt), known as Bernhard Fischer until 1926, was a German physician and anatomical pathologist, who served as Director of the Senckenberg Institute of Pathology (1908–1941), Professor of Pathology (1914–1941) and Rector of the Goethe University Frankfurt (1930–1931). He was a leading cancer researcher and is world-renowned as the father of petrochemical carcinogenesis.

Career

Bernhard Fischer studied medicine in Strasbourg, Munich and Berlin, and obtained his doctoral degree in Bonn in 1900 and his Habilitation in 1903. His doctoral advisor was Karl Koester, himself a student of Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen and a grand-disciple of the father of modern pathology, Rudolf Virchow.

Bernhard Fischer became Professor and Prosector at the Augusta Hospital in Cologne in 1908. Already in the same year, he was appointed Director of the Senckenberg Institute of Pathology in Frankfurt, at the age of 31, and became Professor Ordinarius of Pathology at the Goethe University Frankfurt from its establishment by the wealthy liberal citizenry of Frankfurt in 1914. From 1930 to 1931, he was Rector of the Goethe University Frankfurt.

As rector of the university, he was noted for his elitist views, believing university education should be reserved for the talented few; he was perceived by the Nazis as a representative of the "liberal old professors."[1]

His students and close collaborators at the Senckenberg Institute of Pathology included Philipp Schwartz, Rudolf Jaffé and Edgar Goldschmid. The young physician Rose Hölscher made a silhouette of him, published in the booklet Frankfurter Charakterköpfe with portraits from the Faculty of Medicine from 1921.[2][3]

Background

He was a son of glassworks director Heinrich Fischer, and his family belonged to the Old Catholic Church. He married Swiss-born Clara Wasels, daughter of a Zurich business executive, in 1909; after her death in 1925, he combined her birth name Wasels with his own in 1926. He was married to Margarete Knögel in his second marriage from 1926. He had four and three children, respectively, in each of his marriages.[4]

References

  1. Demeter, Rainer (1991), Der Pathologe Bernhard Fischer-Wasels (1877–1941); ein Leben im Dienste der Tumorforschung, doctoral dissertation, 381 pages, Goethe University Frankfurt
  2. Rose Hölscher, Frankfurter Charakterköpfe: Aus d. medizin. Fakultät ; 39 Scherenschnitte, Englert & Schlosser, 1921, 41 pages
  3. Hölscher, Rose
  4. Gruber, Georg B. (1961), "Fischer-Wasels, Bernhard", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German) 5, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 213–214, (full text online)