Friedrich Fülleborn

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Friedrich Fülleborn (September 13, 1866 - September 9, 1933) was a physician who specialized in tropical medicine and parasitology. He was a native of Kulm, West Prussia, which today is known as Chelmno, Poland. He studied medicine and natural sciences in Berlin, where one of his instructors was Heinrich Wilhelm Waldeyer (1835-1921). From 1894 to 1901 he was a military physician assigned to the Schutztruppe in German East Africa, where he also performed scientific studies of the region.

In 1901 Fülleborn became director of the Department of Tropical Hygiene and Tropical Medicine at the Hamburg Institute for Marine and Tropical Diseases. In 1908 he was appointed by Georg Thilenius (1868-1937) of the Hamburg Museum of Ethnology to head the "Hamburg South Seas Expedition" on a scientific mission to the South Pacific. In 1930 he succeeded Bernhard Nocht (1857-1945) as director of the Hamburg Institute for Marine and Tropical Diseases, a position he maintained until his death in 1933.

  • Associated eponym:
  • Fülleborn's method: A procedure for examining parasitic ova in faecal matter.

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