Franz Ignaz Pruner

Franz Ignaz Pruner Bey
BornMarch 8, 1808
DiedSeptember 29, 1882

Franz Ignaz Pruner Bey (March 8, 1808 – September 29, 1882) was a German physician and anthropologist.

Life and career

Pruner was born on in Pfreimd, Germany, on March 8, 1808.[1] His father was Ignace Brunner, a civil servant. His mother was Catherine Hochler, the daughter of a municipal councillor.[1]

In 1826, Pruner entered the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.[1] He began studying medicine at the University of Munich the following year, where he became an assisstant to Ernest von Grossi, a specialist in experimential medicine.[1] In 1830, Pruner received a Doctor of Medicine.[1]

In 1831, Pruner went to Paris, France, to contiune studying medicine.[1] There, he met French physician and psychiatrist Étienne Pariset.[1] The same year, Pruner joined K. M. von Hügel on a trip traveling to India, Palestine, Syria, Egypt, and Greece, where they observed cholera and plague epidemics.[1] In Jersulame, they studying the treatment of leprosy.[1]

In September 1831, Pruner was in Alexandria, Egypt.[1] He was offered a position at the medical school at Abu Za’bal, where he became the chair of anatomy and physiology.[1]

In 1832, Pruner returned to Munich, Germany.[1]

In 1833, Pruner traveled to Malta and Italy.[1] He studied ophthalmology in Pavia, Italy.[1] The same year he returned to Egypt to become the director of a military hospital near Cairo.[1]

In 1835, Pruner traveled to Mecca, Saudia Arabia, to help fight a cholera epidemic.[1]

In 1836, he was appointed the director of military hospitals in Cairo.[1] He was later named professor of ophthalmology at Cairo.[1]

In 1849, Abbas I of Egypt made Pruner his personal physician, giving him the title Bey.[1] He resigned from his position in 1860.[1]

In 1865, Pruner served as president of the Société d'Anthropologie de Paris.[1]

In 1872, Pruner moved to Pisa, Italy. He would live there for ten years before dying of an illness on September 29, 1882.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 11 & 12. Scribner. 1981. pp. 177–178.