Herxheimer, Karl
Herxheimer, Karl
Physician
Born: 26.06.1861 in Wiesbaden
died: 06.12.1942 in Theresienstadt concentration camp
Herxheimer, son of the merchant Herz (Hermann) Herxheimer, studied medicine in Freiburg, Würzburg and Strasbourg, went to the pathological institute in Frankfurt am Main and the dermatological clinic in Breslau after completing his doctorate and returned to Frankfurt, where he settled as a specialist for skin diseases. His brother Salomon Herxheimer (1842-1899) was already practicing here.
In 1894, Herxheimer became director of the city's dermatology clinic and, after the accidental death of his brother in 1899, also headed the clinic founded by the latter. In 1914, he took over the chair of dermatology at the new Frankfurt University, of which he was a co-founder.
Appointed Royal Prussian Privy Medical Councillor in 1914, Herxheimer was regarded as one of the leading dermatologists of his time and an outstanding therapist who had developed numerous new healing methods.
He was awarded emeritus status in 1930, but three years later his emeritus status was revoked and he was placed under house arrest in 1941. His escape to Switzerland, for which all preparations had been made by some helpers in the spring of 1942, came to nothing; on September 1, 1942, Herxheimer and his partner were deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp, where he was murdered.
The so-called Herxheimer reaction is named after him. The highest award in German dermatology, the Karl Herxheimer Medal, which is awarded for outstanding achievements in the field of dermato-venereology, is named after Herxheimer.
Literature
Notter, Bettina: Life and work of the dermatologists Karl Herxheimer (1861-1942) and Salomon Herxheimer (1841-1899), dissertation. Frankfurt 1994.
Zoske, Horst: Karl Herxheimer. In: Neue Deutsche Biographie vol. 8 [pp. 727 f.].