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{{nihongo|'''Ōmori Harutoyo'''|大森 治豊||December 20, 1852 - February 19, 1912}} was a Japanese surgeon who became the first president of the Fukuoka Medical College that was founded in 1903 as a branch of the Medical Faculty of Kyōto University (''Kyōto teikoku daigaku Fukuoka ika-daigaku'', now the Faculty of Medicine, [[Kyushu University]]).
{{nihongo|'''Ōmori Harutoyo'''|大森 治豊||December 20, 1852 - February 19, 1912}} was a Japanese surgeon who became the first president of the Fukuoka Medical College that was founded in 1903 as a branch of the Medical Faculty of Kyōto University (''Kyōto teikoku daigaku Fukuoka ika-daigaku'', now the Faculty of Medicine, [[Kyushu University]]).


Ōmori was born in the villag Dewa, [[Yamagata prefecture]]. In 1879 he graduated from [[Tokyo University]]; the same year he went to a new post in the newly established Fukuoka Medical School. In 1888 when this school was abolished, he was appointed as the first director of the Fukuoka Prefectural Hospital. In 1885, he performed the first [[cesarean]] operation in Japan. Dr. Omori laid the foundation for Kyushu University Faculty of Medicine before retiring in 1909. <ref>Kyushu University Archive (ed.): One Hundred Years of Kyushu University. Fukuoka, 2011, pp.10-17 (in Japanese, Kyūshū Daigaku hyakunen-shi shashin-shū)</ref> He did from a kidney trouble and was burried in the Sōfuku-Temple ([[Sōfuku-ji (Fukuoka)]] next to the campus of the medical faculty.
Ōmori was born in the Dewa, [[Yamagata prefecture]]. In 1879 he graduated from [[Tokyo University]]; the same year he went to a new post in the newly established Fukuoka Medical School. In 1888 when this school was abolished, he was appointed as the first director of the Fukuoka Prefectural Hospital. In 1885, he performed the first [[cesarean]] operation in Japan. Dr. Omori laid the foundation for Kyushu University Faculty of Medicine before retiring in 1909. <ref>Kyushu University Archive (ed.): One Hundred Years of Kyushu University. Fukuoka, 2011, pp.10-17 (in Japanese, Kyūshū Daigaku hyakunen-shi shashin-shū)</ref> He did from a kidney trouble and was burried in the Sōfuku-Temple ([[Sōfuku-ji (Fukuoka)]] next to the campus of the medical faculty.


<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Ōmori-Harutoyo-1852-1912-President-Kyushu-University.jpg|Grave of Ōmori Harutoyo in the graveyard of the Sōfuku-Temple)
File:Sculpture of Omori Harutoyo in Kyushu University Hospital.jpg|Statue of Ōmori Harutoyo near the university hospital
File:九州大学病院.jpg|Ōmori-Street (Ōmori dōri) in the Maidashi Campus of Kyushu University
File:九州大学病院.jpg|Ōmori-Street (Ōmori dōri) in the Maidashi Campus of Kyushu University
File:Sculpture of Omori Harutoyo in Kyushu University Hospital.jpg|Statue of Ōmori Harutoyo near the university hospital
File:Ōmori-Harutoyo-1852-1912-President-Kyushu-University.jpg|Grave of Ōmori Harutoyo in the graveyard of the Sōfuku-Temple)
</gallery>
</gallery>



Revision as of 23:17, 29 April 2015

Ōmori Harutoyo

Template:Japanese name Ōmori Harutoyo (大森 治豊, December 20, 1852 - February 19, 1912) was a Japanese surgeon who became the first president of the Fukuoka Medical College that was founded in 1903 as a branch of the Medical Faculty of Kyōto University (Kyōto teikoku daigaku Fukuoka ika-daigaku, now the Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University).

Ōmori was born in the village Dewa, nowadays part of Yamagata-City in Yamagata prefecture. In 1879 he graduated from Tokyo University; the same year he went to a new post in the newly established Fukuoka Medical School. In 1888 when this school was abolished, he was appointed as the first director of the Fukuoka Prefectural Hospital. In 1885, he performed the first cesarean operation in Japan. Dr. Omori laid the foundation for Kyushu University Faculty of Medicine before retiring in 1909. [1] He did from a kidney trouble and was burried in the Sōfuku-Temple (Sōfuku-ji (Fukuoka) next to the campus of the medical faculty.

See also

Template:Persondata

  1. ^ Kyushu University Archive (ed.): One Hundred Years of Kyushu University. Fukuoka, 2011, pp.10-17 (in Japanese, Kyūshū Daigaku hyakunen-shi shashin-shū)