Edgar von Gierke

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Edgar Otto Conrad von Gierke (9 February 1877, in

pathologist who specialized in glycogenesis and discovered glycogen storage disease type I (formerly known as von Gierke disease) in 1929.[1][2]

Early life

Edgar was born in 1877 the

Protestant.[1] As a result, Edgar was labeled "Mischling 1. Grades" ("half-breed 1st degree") by the Nazi party.[1]

In 1896, von Gierke served one year as a military volunteer in the Silesian Field Artillery Regiment and subsequently served as a staff surgeon of the reserve during World War I.[1] He participated in the Battle of Lorraine.[1]

Education and career

He received his medical doctorate at Heidelberg University in 1901 and became a lecturer at the University of Freiburg in 1904.[1] Several years later he became a prosector at the municipal hospital in Karlsruhe. In 1908, von Gierke took over the managing position of the Pathological-Bacteriological Institute of the Karlsruhe Municipal Hospitals for his colleague Ernst Schwalbe and retained this position for nearly 30 years.[1] In 1911, von Gierke also became an associate professor of bacteriology at the Technische Hochschule in Karlsruhe.[3] During his career, he published the highly regarded on anatomy book Taschenbuch der pathologischen Anatomie (Pocketbook of Pathological Anatomy).[1]

von Gierke disease

von Gierke published a seminal article in 1929 detailing his discovery of a newly described glycogen storage disease that affected the liver and kidneys that he discovered on an autopsy of an affected child. He originally termed the disease "Hepato-Nephromegalia glykogenica". von Gierke's accomplishment was later rewarded and the disease was later given the eponymous distinction of being known as von Gierke disease, which was subsequently renamed to glycogen storage disease type I.[1]

Nazi Germany

von Gierke was forced to prematurely retire by the

pathology department at the Karlsruhe municipal hospital due to a lack of personnel.[1] He was again forcibly retired in 1940 when Richard Böhmig, whom he temporarily replaced while Böhmig served in World War II, returned to his service at the municipal hospital after being discharged from his military service.[1]

von Gierke's views on the Nazi party are poorly understood due to a lack of information. A few letters that von Gierke signed "Heil Hitler" have been recovered and on a Nazi party-administered political questionnaire he stated that he was a member of the Nazi groups known as the

German Labor Front, the Reichsbund der Deutschen Beamten (Reich's Union of German Civil Servants), and the National Socialist German Doctors' League, but it is thought by modern history scholars that such membership and actions were a result of political pressure and expectations rather than due to truly sympathizing with the Nazi party.[1]

Personal life

He married Julie Braun in 1912 and fathered four children. One of his son, Henning von Gierke, become an eminent acoustical engineer and scientist.[4]

In 1945, von Gierke died from an unknown progressive heart disease at the age of 68.[1]

Awards

For his military service as a surgeon during World War I, von Gierke received the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class and the Knight's Cross 2nd class as well as swords of the Order of the Zähringer Lion.[1] A street in Karslruhe was named after him in his honor.[1]

References