Ivan Ivanovich Arkhangelsky ( 1832 - 1888 ) - Russian military doctor, doctor of medicine , current state adviser .
| Ivan Ivanovich Arkhangelsky | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | 1832 |
| Place of Birth | Smolensk province |
| Date of death | March 2 (14), 1888 |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
| Alma mater | Imperial Medical and Surgical Academy (1859) |
Biography
He came from a spiritual rank. He received his primary education at the Smolensk Theological Seminary (issue 1854). He enrolled as a state-owned student at the St. Petersburg Medical and Surgical Academy , from where he was graduated in 1859 as a doctor, with a gold medal, and was seconded to the 2nd St. Petersburg Military Land Hospital. For his dissertation “On Caustic Means for Uterine Diseases” (St. Petersburg, 1862), on October 27, 1862, I. I. Arkhangelsky received his doctorate in medicine and, in 1863, with the title of obstetrician, was appointed junior resident at the Warsaw Uyazdovsky Military Hospital. In the same year, he was transferred as a junior resident to the Kiev military hospital, and in 1864 he was appointed senior doctor of the 32nd artillery brigade.
In 1865, I. I. Arkhangelsky was dismissed from military service and took the post of senior doctor of the Vilnius hospital; but in 1866 he returned to the military department and entered the chief physician of the Minsk military hospital. Serving in Minsk, Arkhangelsky was also a doctor of the Minsk Theological Seminary since 1868 and, before retiring from military service in 1881, he gave six public lectures in Minsk on public hygiene and dietetics, which were then published as a separate book. He continued to be a doctor in the Minsk Seminary, and in 1885 he was appointed head doctor of the Dinaburg Military Hospital.
Collaborated in various medical journals, posting articles of a special nature.
He died on March 2 ( 14 ), 1888 . He was buried at the Bolsheokhtinsky cemetery [1] .
Notes
Literature
- Arkhangelsky, Ivan Ivanovich // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.