Dmitry Alekseevich Vvedensky ( 1887 - 1956 ) - Russian and Soviet urologist ; Professor (1933), Doctor of Medical Sciences (1942), Honored Scientist of the Uzbek SSR (1947). The author of more than 40 scientific papers.
| Vvedensky Dmitry Alekseevich | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | January 3, 1887 | |||||||
| Place of Birth | Moscow Russian empire | |||||||
| Date of death | September 11, 1956 (69 years old) | |||||||
| A place of death | Tashkent Uzbek SSR , USSR | |||||||
| Citizenship | ||||||||
| Nationality | ||||||||
| Occupation | medic | |||||||
| Father | Vvedensky Alexey Andreevich | |||||||
| Spouse | Vera Andreevna Callistova | |||||||
| Awards and prizes | Russian: Soviet: | |||||||
Biography
Born on January 3, 1887 in Moscow, the son of a surgeon A. A. Vvedensky
In Tomsk, where the family lived then, Dmitry graduated from the men's gymnasium and entered the medical faculty of Moscow University . He led an active life, was a Social Revolutionary , participated in student strikes, which is why he completed his studies in Berlin . Passed exams for a doctor at Moscow University and received the title of county doctor in 1912. At the end of the same year he was mobilized into the army and served as a doctor of the Ivangorod fortress artillery. Demobilized at the end of 1913, he worked in Brest-Litovsk . Here, with the money of his father, he opened his own office and began to engage in urology.
With the outbreak of World War I , Vvedensky in August 1914 was mobilized and immediately sent to the front. For participation in hostilities he was awarded five orders - St. Vladimir of the 4th degree, St. Stanislav of the 3rd and 2nd degrees and St. Anna with swords and bows of the 3rd and 2nd degrees. Since he knew French, in April 1916 he was sent to France as part of the Russian Expeditionary Force , served in the 5th Special Infantry Regiment (since July 1917 he was the regiment's senior doctor). During his service in France he was awarded French awards. He was not injured, but was twice poisoned by gas. From 1917 to 1919 he served as an ordinary machine gunner, then as a corporal in the Russian Legion of Honor in France and in the Soloniki, formed from Russian units that remained loyal to the oath of the tsarist army.
In 1919, he returned to Soviet Russia through Vladivostok and arrived in Tomsk . He was a participant in the Civil War in Russia on the side of the Red Army. In 1920 he was transferred to a military hospital in Tashkent. Here he began to engage in science - he was an assistant in the Department of Urology of the Medical Faculty of the University of Turkestan (1924-1931); Associate Professor in 1931-1933, professor of the Department of Urology of the Tashkent Medical Institute since 1933.
During the Great Patriotic War he asked to volunteer for the front and not immediately, but got there. He served as the head of the meditation group on the 1st Ukrainian Front, reached Berlin , became a lieutenant colonel . After the war, he continued to work at the Tashkent Medical Institute. He was the first chairman of the urological society of the Uzbek SSR.
He died of a heart attack [1] on September 11, 1956 in Tashkent. He was buried at the Botkin cemetery in Tashkent. In Soviet times, he was awarded the orders of "Lenin", "Red Star" and medals.