Jump to content

Anna Honzáková

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anna Honzáková

Anna Honzáková (16 November 1875 in Kopidlno – 13 October 1940 in Prague) was the first female medical doctor to graduate from the Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague, which she did on 17 March 1902.[1][2][3] She was also the third Czech woman to earn a doctor's certificate, although the first two, Bohuslava Kecková (graduated 1880 from the University of Zurich) and Anna Bayerová (graduated 1881 from the University of Bern), had done so at Swiss universities rather than Czech ones, and had had to practice abroad as their doctorates were not recognized by their homeland.[1][4][5] Honzáková was at first allowed only to go to lectures, not examinations, at medical school, but this changed after five years, when she was allowed to take exams for all she had been studying.

After graduation she worked for Charles Maydl, the founder of Czech surgery and anaesthesiology, as an unpaid trainee, but had to leave when he died, and could not get a medical post in the civil hospital.[1] Therefore, Honzáková worked in an open private gynecological surgery in the street of Moráni in Prague for thirty-five years, until her death.[1] She was also the school doctor for Minerva Grammar School. She wrote a biography of Anna Bayerová, as well as a publication on how to protect children from tuberculosis with Klementina Hanušová.[1] She also created a fund to support sick and poor women.[1]

A commemorative plaque was unveiled at the house in Moráni where she practiced; however, it wrongly lists the date of her graduation as 18 March rather than 17 March.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "ENA-IN.cz – Prvn esk lkaka se pekek nezalekla – Magazn". ENA-IN. Archived from the original on 4 November 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  2. ^ J. Tomes et al.: Czech Biographical Dictionary of the 20th Century. Prague: Ladislav Horacek – Litomyšl: Paseka 1999; 491st
  3. ^ Free P, Hlaváčková L .: History of Medicine in the Czech lands. Praha: Triton 2004; 140, 149
  4. ^ "The Lives and Fate of Our Compatriots in the World (Životy a osudy našich krajanů ve světě) (1/3)". Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  5. ^ Good, David F.; Grandner, Margarete; Maynes, Mary Jo (1996). Austrian Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Cross-disciplinary Perspectives (Print). Providence, RI: Berghahn Books. pp. 49–. ISBN 978-1-57181-045-8.