Victor Kandinsky


Victor Khrisanfovich Kandinsky was a psychiatrist from the Russian Empire and a second cousin to the renowned artist Wassily Kandinsky. Born in Siberia into a wealthy family of businessmen, Victor Kandinsky is regarded as a significant figure in Russian psychiatry, particularly for his contributions to the understanding of hallucinations.

Biography

Kandinsky graduated from Moscow Imperial University Medical School in 1872 and began his career as a general practitioner in a hospital in Moscow.
In 1877, while serving as a military physician during the Russo-Turkish War, he began experiencing mood swings and hallucinations. He was medically discharged on 13 May 1877 and admitted to a naval hospital for treatment. Following the end of the war, Kandinsky was awarded a bronze medal for his service in the conflict.
In 1878, he married his medical nurse, Elizaveta Karlovna Freimut. Kandinsky’s personal physician diagnosed him with melancholia, but he self-identified his condition as primäre Verrücktheit, which is anachronistically associated with modern concepts of schizophrenia-like disorders. Contemporary psychiatrists diagnose him with paranoid schizophrenia.
In October 1878, Victor was admitted to a psychiatric hospital once again. He was transferred to A. Y. Frey Private Psychiatric Hospital in Saint Petersburg. By 1879, he returned to Moscow.
In 1881, he relocated to Saint Petersburg, where he worked at the since August 1881.
Kandinsky joined the St. Petersburg Psychiatric Association on 23 January 1882.
In 1885, he published a German-language book titled "Kritische und klinische Betrachtungen im Gebiete der Sinnestäuschungen", detailing his personal experiences with pseudohallucinations.
In July 1889, feeling the recurrence of psychotic symptoms, Kandinsky tragically took his own life by overdosing on opium. His last written words were: "1) I had about n grams of opium… 2) I'm reading 'The Cossacks' by Tolstoy… 3) It is becoming difficult for me to read…" . He died as a patient at the institution he had previously run as medical superintendent, the St. Nicholas Asylum in Saint Petersburg.
His wife, Elizaveta Freimut-Kandinsky, later arranged for the posthumous publication of his scientific works, including "On Pseudohallucinations" and "On Irresponsibility," before taking her own life.

Scientific contribution

Kandinsky authored numerous journal papers in Russian, German, and French on psychiatric, medical, and philosophical subjects. His monograph "On Pseudohallucinations" published posthumously in 1890, described a condition characterised by alienation from personal mental processes, along with delusions of control by external forces. This condition was later termed Kandinsky–Clérambault syndrome, after Kandinsky and French psychiatrist Gaëtan Gatian de Clérambault, who also independently studied and described similar symptoms. The syndrome, also referred to as the syndrome of mental automatism, remains a notable concept in the study of psychotic disorders, particularly paranoid schizophrenia.
Kandinsky experienced various types of pseudohallucinations—visual, tactile, auditory—in all sensory modalities except taste. His initial studies on pseudohallucinations were based on detailed descriptions of his subjective personal experiences during psychotic episodes.
Kandinsky's major contributions to psychiatry include advancements in psychiatric classification, psychopathology, and forensic psychiatry. In 1882, he developed a diagnostic system with 16 categories of mental disorders, which was widely used by the Psychiatric Hospital of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker for many years. He also coined the term "" in 1890 to describe a disorder of perception and thinking, which was later replaced by the term "schizophrenia" still in use today.

Works

;Books in Russian
;Reprinted books
;Philosophy
;Psychiatry
;Medical articles
;In German and Polish
;Translated into Russian
*