Leon Szuman
Leon Szuman was a Polish surgeon, poet, and social activist.
Biography
Leon Szuman was born on 13 November 1852 in Kujawki. His father was Idzi Szuman, a participant of the January Uprising, who was imprisoned in Konin Fortress for making bullets for the insurgents. Leon's mother died of tuberculosis a few years after his birth.After his mother's death, he was raised in the home of his maternal uncle in Poznań. He initially studied at home. At the age of nine, he began his education at the Gymnasium of St. Mary Magdalene in Poznań. He graduated in 1871. From 1871 to 1876, he studied medicine in Wrocław. In 1872, he began independent scientific research. He experimented on animals, partly in physiological institutes and partly in natural conditions in the countryside. The result of his research was a dissertation titled "Experiments on the Temporary and Permanent Closure of Vessels after Ligature and Acupressure," which was awarded by the Medical Faculty of the University of Wrocław. The work was published in 1847 in the Annals of the Warsaw Medical Society. During his studies, he had a break due to health problems. He obtained his medical degree in 1876 based on his scientific work on malignant bone growths. After two years of assistantship, he passed the state examination in 1877, qualifying him to practice as a physician.
From 1877 to 1879, he worked as an emergency physician. He was an assistant to Professor Hermann Fischer. Due to low wages and conflict with Fischer, in June 1879, Szuman settled in Toruń.
He began his medical practice at the private hospital of the deaconess sisters. As the first doctor in Toruń, he performed surgeries on the appendix, gallbladder, hernia, intestines, and stomach.
In 1884, he established a small private clinic on Mikołaj Kopernik Street. On 7 March 1893 he founded a new clinic located on the then Werderstrasse. The new clinic was equipped with modern equipment and surgical instruments, allowing for procedures that could not be performed at the City Hospital or other private clinics. Thanks to numerous successes, his clinic gained a reputation, and Szuman himself was called the "Pomeranian Mikulicz".
He wrote over 50 scientific publications published in Polish and German journals. Most of the texts were published in the Poznań ''Medical News. In 1914, he became a member of the Association of Polish Physicians and Naturalists in St. Petersburg. He was also a member of the German Medical Chamber.
In 1918, Szuman handed over the clinic to his closest collaborator, Dr. Zdzisław Dandelski. On 24 November 1918 he signed a petition for assistance to repatriates. Leon Szuman died on 11 November 1920 in Grzymysław near Śrem. He was buried in St. George's Cemetery in Toruń. Leon Szuman's medical library was transferred to the University Library in Poznań.