| + | Born in Bietigheim-Bissingen, von Baelz first attended medical school at Tubingen University, but ultimately earned his degree from Leipzig University, reportedly graduating with top marks. He began working as a physician at Leipzig Hospital, and there met [[Sagara Motosada]], the first Japanese to study medicine in Leipzig; as a result of this contact, von Baelz was invited in [[1876]] to join the faculty of the Tokyo School of Medicine (later, the School of Medicine at [[Tokyo Imperial University]]). He then remained at the school for over twenty years, both teaching and practicing medicine in Tokyo, until [[1902]]. He researched a number of medical conditions, and was the first in the world to discover the lung fluke parasite, the chief cause of paragonimiasis. |
− | Born in Bietigheim-Bissingen, von Baelz first attended medical school at Tubingen University, but ultimately earned his degree from Leipzig University, reportedly graduating with top marks. He began working as a physician at Leipzig Hospital, and there met [[Sagara Motosada]], the first Japanese to study medicine in Leipzig; as a result of this contact, von Baelz was invited in [[1876]] to join the faculty of the Tokyo School of Medicine. He then remained at the school for over twenty years, both teaching and practicing medicine in Tokyo, until [[1902]].
| + | After leaving his position at the university, he became a court physician in service to the Imperial government, but left that position several years later, in [[1905]], to return to Germany. He died in 1913 of an aortic aneurysm. His diary of his time in Japan remains a notable source for historians. |