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JOHANNES See also: German surgeon, was See also: born at Tonning, in See also: Schleswig-Holstein, on the 9th of See also: January 1823
.
He studied at See also: Kiel and See also: Gottingen, and in 1846 became B
.
R
.
K. von Langenbeck's assistant at the Kiel surgical hospital
.
He served in the Schleswig-Holstein War of 1848 as junior surgeon, and this directed his See also: attention to the subject of military surgery
.
He was taken prisoner, but afterwards exchanged, and was then appointed as surgeon to a See also: field hospital
.
During the truce of 1849 he qualified as Privatdocent at Kiel, but on the fresh outbreak of war he returned to the troops and was promoted to the
See also: rank of See also: senior surgeon
.
In 1854 he became director of the surgical clinic at Kiel, and in 1857 See also: head of the general hospital and professor at the university
.
During the Schleswig-Holstein War of 1864 Esmarch rendered See also: good service to the field hospitals of Flensburg, Sundewitt and Kiel
.
In 1866 he was called to Berlin as member of the hospital commission, and also to take the superintendence of the surgical See also: work in the hospitals there
.
When the Franco-German War broke out in 187ohewas appointed surgeon-general to the army, and afterwards consulting surgeon at the See also: great military hospital near Berlin
.
In 1872 he married Princess Henrietta of Schleswig-Holstein-See also: Sonderburg-Augustenburg, aunt of the Empress Auguste See also: Victoria
.
In 1887 a patent of See also: nobility was conferred on him
.
He died at Kiel on the 23rd of See also: February 1908
.
Esmarch was one of the greatest authorities on hospital management and military surgery
.
His Handbuch der kriegschirurgischen Technik was written for a prize offered by the empress See also: Augusta, on the occasion of the Vienna See also: Exhibition of 1877, for the best handbook for the battlefield of surgical appliances and operations
.
This See also: book is illustrated by admirable diagrams, showing the different methods of bandaging and dressing, as well as the surgical operations as they occur on the battlefield
.
Esmarch himself invented an apparatus, which bears his name, for keeping a See also: limb nearly bloodless during amputation
.
No See also: part of Esmarch's work is more widely known than that which deals with " First Aid," his First Aid on the Battlefield and First Aid to the Injured being popular manuals on the subject
.
The latter is the substance of a course of lectures delivered by him in 1881 to a " Samaritan School," the first of the kind in See also: Germany, founded by Esmarch in 1881, in imitation of the St See also: John's Ambulance classes which had been organized in
See also: England in 1878
.
These lectures were very generally adopted as a See also: manual for first aid students, edition after edition having been called for, and they have been translated into numerous See also: languages, the See also: English version being the work of H.R.H
.
Princess Christian
.
No ambulance course would be See also: complete without ademonstration of the Esmarch bandage
.
It is a three-sided piece of See also: linen or See also: cotton, of which the See also: base See also: measures 4 ft. and the sides 2 ft
.
10 in . It can be used folded or open, and applied in See also: thirty-two different ways
.
It answers every purpose for temporary dressing and field-work, while its great recommendation is that the means for making it are always at See also: hand
.
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