Ernst von Leyden


Ernst Viktor von Leyden was a German internist from Danzig.

Biography

He studied medicine at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Institut in Berlin, and was a pupil of Johann Lukas Schönlein and Ludwig Traube. He was later a medical professor at the universities of Königsberg, Strassburg and Berlin. Leyden was an important influence to the career of Ludwig Edinger, and during his tenure at the University of Königsberg worked closely with Otto Spiegelberg and Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen. Among his better known students and assistants were Hermann Nothnagel at Königsberg and Hermann Ludwig Eichhorst in Berlin.
In 1880, with Friedrich Theodor von Frerichs, he founded the Zeitschrift für klinische Medizin; in 1881 he founded the Gesellschaft für innere Medizin. He treated Frederick III, German Emperor for his cancer of the larynx, though unsuccessfully, and in the 1890s he was a physician to Tsar Alexander III of Russia. Upon Alexander's death in 1894, Von Leyden was awarded the Order of St. Anna, First Class, with Distinction, by his successor, Tsar Nicholas II.
Von Leyden died in Berlin. The political philosopher Wolfgang von Leyden was his grandson.
Von Leyden specialized in neurological diseases, and was also a leader in establishing proper hospital facilities for tuberculosis patients. He wrote articles on a wide array of medical topics, including works on tabes dorsalis and poliomyelitis. In 1887–99 he published the two-volume Handbuch der Ernährungstherapie ; second edition 1903–04.
He also initiated two important events in the early history of oncology: the first international cancer conference, which took place in Heidelberg, Germany, in 1906, and the founding of the first international association for cancer research in Berlin in 1908.

Eponymous medical terms named for Ernst von Leyden

Ernst von Leyden medal

From time to time, the Ernst von Leyden commemoration medal is awarded for exceptional achievements in the field of internal medicine in Germany