Jonas Charles Hermann Freund

Jonas Charles Hermann Freund (1808 – 29 December 1879)[1] was an Austrian-British physician, known as the co-founder of the German Hospital in London.[2][3]

Career

Born to a Jewish family in Bohemia, Freund received a medical degree at the University of Vienna. In London in 1843 he was a co-founder of London's German Hospital, which opened in October 1845. He was Physician in Charge of the hospital until about 1850. The evidence suggests that he was Karl Marx's doctor.[4] Freund was Deputy Inspector-General of Army Hospitals in the Crimean war and an army surgeon.[1]

Family

In London in 1846 he married Prussian-born Louise Amalie Rüdiger, who became a prominent editor and author under the pseudonym "Amelia Lewis". She was an inventor and a campaigner for women's rights.[4] Their son John Christian Freund became a prominent editor and publisher.

References

  1. "Deaths". British Medical Journal: 75. 10 January 1880.
  2. Manz, Stefan; Beerbühl, Margrit Schulte; Davis, John R., eds. (2007). Migration and Transfer from Germany to Britain, 1660–1914. p. 121. ISBN 9783598230028.
  3. German Hospital, Lost Hospitals of London, ezitis.myzen.co.uk
  4. Rubinstein, William D. (2011). The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. p. 302. ISBN 9780230304666.
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