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Charité and hospital
In December 1896, Behring married Else Spinola ( a daughter of Bernhard Spinola, director of the " Charité " hospital in Berlin.
The concept and term were introduced by the Berlin pathologist Dr Kurt Apitz in 1940, at that time the Oberarzt of the pathological institute at the Charité hospital.
In March, all Jewish doctors had to leave the Charité hospital.
In consequence, Berlin's city council, exhorted by Rudolf Virchow built a second hospital ( after the Charité ), the Krankenhaus Moabit in 1872.
In 1874 the Krankenhaus im Friedrichshain was opened, Berlin's first hospital beside the university clinic Charité.
In 1905 he accepted a position as director of the bacteriology lab in Berlins Charité hospital, becoming Professor extraordinary at Berlin University in 1908.
Tymoshenko ended her hunger strike and was transferred to a hospital near Kharkiv on 9 May 2012, accompanied by German neurologist Lutz Harms of the Charité clinic Berlin.
Instituted in 1864 by Dr. Aaron Silverman of the Charité hospital of Berlin, the German Red Cross was a voluntary civil assistance organization that was officially acknowledged by the Geneva Convention in 1929.
In the 1890s, Rudolf Virchow and Ferdinand Sauerbruch tested the mummy as did Charité, the largest university hospital in Europe, but all without success.

Charité and founded
In 1916, he was appointed head of the newly founded Department of Facial Plastic Surgery at the Ear, Nose and Throat Clinic at the Charité by the Prussian Ministry of Education and Cultural Affairs.
Charenton was a lunatic asylum, founded in 1645 by the Frères de la Charité in Charenton-Saint-Maurice, now Saint-Maurice, Val-de-Marne, France.
In 1952 Rapoport founded at the Berlin Charité a Biochemical Institute.

Charité and Berlin
He retained that interest during his subsequent medical studies at the universities of Breslau, Strassburg, Freiburg im Breisgau and Leipzig, After obtaining his doctorate in 1882 he worked at the Charité in Berlin as an assistant medical director under Theodor Frerichs, the founder of experimental clinical medicine, focusing on histology, hematology and color chemistry ( dyes ).
After completing his clinical education and habilitation at the Charité in Berlin in 1886, Ehrlich left Charité employment and traveled to Egypt and other countries in 1888 and 1889, one reason being to cure a case of tuberculosis, with which he had become infected in the laboratory.
A study of Charité Hospital in Berlin by Lorenzo et al., published in The European Heart Journal, showed adding milk to tea causes the casein to bind to the molecules in tea that cause the arteries to relax, especially a catechin molecule called EGCG, although a more recent study by Reddy et al.
By 1856, Virchow was asked to return from Würzburg to the Charité Hospital in Berlin.
He died in the Berlin Charité from pneumonia at the age of sixty-nine.
In 1798 Frederick William III of Prussia granted him the position director of the medical college and generally of state medical affairs at the Charité, in Berlin.
Autopsy room of the Charité Berlin
Born in Bamberg, with Jewish origins, he studied at several universities throughout Germany, and in 1890 began to work under Robert Koch at the Institute for Infectious Diseases at the Charité in Berlin.
From 1928 to 1949, he was the head of the surgical department at the Charité in Berlin, attaining international fame for his innovative operations.
The research groups of Professor Hendrik Fuchs ( Charité University, Berlin, Germany ) and Dr David Flavell ( Southampton General Hospital, United Kingdom ) are working together toward the development of Gypsophila saponins for use in combination with immunotoxins or other targeted toxins for patients with leukaemia, lymphoma and other cancers.
For example, in 1785, Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland, a medical practitioner living in Weimar – where he became part of Goethe ’ s intellectual circle – concerns himself with Mesmer und sein Mesmerismus ; a quarter of a century later, while he is the medical head at Berlin ’ s Charité and chief physician of Frederick William III, Hufeland writes about the existence of a Sympathie which, in nature, has " the effect of connecting everything together, in so doing going on to also explain the most unique relationship which holds together magnetizing therapist and magnetized patient.
Billroth worked as a doctor from 1853 – 1860 at the Charité in Berlin.
The club arose from an informal association of local academics around the medical student Georg August Wagner from Prague, later a professor at the Charles University and the Charité in Berlin.
Then, he worked for four years as a clinical assistant at the First Medical Clinic of Charité in Berlin.
Memorial at the Charité Berlin by Rudolf Siemering
Six years later he succeeded Johann Friedrich Dieffenbach ( 1794 – 1847 ) as Director of the Clinical Institute for Surgery and Ophthalmology at the Charité in Berlin, and remained there till 1882, when failing health forced him to retire.
He continued his studies at the Charité Hospital in Berlin and was on active duty as a military physician until 1882, continuing as a reservist.
Bier was Chief Surgeon at the Charité in Berlin until 1928, when Ferdinand Sauerbruch ( 18751951 ) assumed the position.

Charité and by
In 1717, King Friedrich I had built a quarantine house for Plague at the city gates, which in 1727 was rechristened by the " soldier king " Friedrich Wilhelm: " Es soll das Haus die Charité " ( It is the house of Charity ).
Excluding the Charité medical school which is co-administered by the university with the Humboldt University, the Freie Universität is currently the lead university for eight collaborative research centres of the German Research Foundation ( DFG ) and also has five DFG research units.
The Institute of Sex Research was opened in 1919 by Hirschfeld and his collaborator Arthur Kronfeld, a once famous psychotherapist and later professor at the Charité.

Charité and at
His final appointments were that of Head of the Medical Clinic at the Hôpital de la Charité and Professor at the Collège de France.
When he graduated in 1843, he went to serve as Johannes Peter Mueller's assistant at the Charité Hospital.
His very innovative work may be viewed as sitting between that of Morgagni whose work Virchow studied, and that of Paul Ehrlich, who studied at the Charité while Virchow was developing microscopic pathology there.
After World War I he worked at Charité Hospital in Paris, and in 1923 became a professor of neurology at the Salpêtrière.
An unpaid position was created for Forssmann at the Berliner Charité Hospital, working under Ferdinand Sauerbruch.
Sophie died in a fire at the Bazar de la Charité in Paris on 4 May 1897.
He was assisting his father and was actually responsible for the termination of his fathers activities at the Charité ( which had become too risky due to his illness ).

Charité and now
625 / 600 BC, now in the Musée d ’ Archéologie Méditerranéenne de la Vieille Charité in Marseille, France
He started his academic career in 1888, in 1904 was appointed Reader and in 1909 gave up his profession at the Völkerkundemuseum when he was appointed tenured professor at the Berlin Charité medical school and in 1911 holder of the first chair of anthropology at Berlin's Frederick William University ( now Humboldt University of Berlin ).

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