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Edward Henry Sieveking

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Nationality
  
United Kingdom

Role
  
Physician

Fields
  
medicine

Known for
  
Epilepsy

Alma mater
  
University of Berlin

Name
  
Edward Sieveking


Edward Henry Sieveking httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
February 24, 1904, Manchester Square, London, United Kingdom

Education
  
Humboldt University of Berlin

Books
  
On Epilepsy and Epileptiform Seizures: Their Causes, Pathology, and Treatment

Doctoral advisor
  
Johannes Peter Muller

Sir Edward Henry Sieveking (24 August 1816 – 24 February 1904) was an English physician.

Contents

Life

Sieveking was born in Bishopsgate, London. He studied medicine at the University of Berlin under eminent physiologist Johannes Peter Muller, and also at University College London and the University of Edinburgh, where he received his doctorate in 1841. For much of his medical career he was associated with St Mary's Hospital in London as a physician and lecturer.

Sieveking had many and varied interests in medicine. He was closely involved in the training of nurses and treatment of the poor, and had a keen interest concerning treatment of epilepsy and other neurological disorders. In 1858, he devised an aesthesiometer, a device for measuring tactile sensitivity of the skin.

He wrote several books, and was responsible for the translation of works by Carl Rokitansky and Moritz Heinrich Romberg from German into English.

He was appointed physician in ordinary to when Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) in 1863, and then physician extraordinary in 1873, and physician in ordinary to Queen Victoria in 1888. In 1886 Sieveking was knighted by Queen Victoria, and in 1901 King Edward VII appointed him Physician Extraordinary to His Majesty.

He was buried in the family grave in Abney Park Cemetery, Stoke Newington.

Writings

  • A Treatise on Ventilation (1846)
  • The Training Institutions for Nurses and the Workhouses (1849)
  • A Manual of Pathological Anatomy, Carl Rokitansky (vol. ii, London, 1849) translated by Sieveking
  • A Manual of the Nervous Diseases of Man, Moritz Heinrich Romberg (2 vols., London, 1853) translated by Sieveking
  • British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review (editor, from 1855)
  • On Epilepsy and Epileptiform Seizures, their Causes, Pathology, and Treatment (London, 1858; 2nd ed. 1861)
  • A Manual of Pathological Anatomy, with Charles Handfield Jones (London, 1854; 2nd ed. 1875)
  • The Medical Adviser in Life Assurance (London, 1874; 2nd ed. 1882)
  • References

    Edward Henry Sieveking Wikipedia