Gustav Hauser

Gustav Hauser (1856-1935)

Gustav Hauser (13 July 1856 in Nördlingen 30 June 1935 in Erlangen) was a German pathologist and bacteriologist.

He studied medicine at the Universities of Munich and Erlangen, where he worked as an assistant in the gynecological clinic under Paul Zweifel and at the pathological institute of Friedrich Albert von Zenker. In 1883 he obtained his habilitation for pathological anatomy and bacteriology, and in 1895 became a full professor and director of the institute of pathology in Erlangen.[1]

In 1885, Hauser was the first to isolate the bacillus Proteus vulgaris.[2] He is also credited with developing a formalin for the preservation of bacterial cultures.[3]

In Erlangen, the thoroughfare Gustav-Hauser-Straße is named in his honor.

Published works

He was the author of works on numerous subjects in medicine. In the field of entomology, he was the author of Die Damaster-Coptolabrus-Gruppe der Gattung Carabus (The Damaster-Coptolabrus group and the genus Carabus). The following are a few of his publications in the field of medicine:

References

  1. Gustav Hauser @ Who Named It
  2. Proteus bacillus @ Who Named It
  3. Pagel: Biographical Dictionary outstanding physicians of the nineteenth century. Berlin, Vienna, 1901, 696-697 Sp.
  4. WorldCat Search (publications).
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