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Robert
Barany was born on April 22, 1876, in Vienna. His father was the manager
of a farm estate and his mother, Maria Hock, was the daughter of a well-known
Prague scientist, and it was her intellectucal influence that was most
pronounced in the family. Robert was the eldest of six children. When
he was quite young he contracted tuberculosis of the bones, which resulted
in permanent stiffness of his kneejoint. It is thought that this illness
first led him to take an interest in medicine. The disability, however,
did not prevent him from playing tennis and walking in the mountains,
right through his life. He was always top of the form - in the primary
school, the grammar school, and was among the best of his year even at
the university.
After completing his medical studies at Vienna University in 1900, Barany
attended the lectures of Professor C. von Noorden in Frankfurt am Main
for one year, and then studied at the psychiatric-neurological clinic
of Professor Kracpelin in Freiburg i.Br. It was there that his interest
in neurological problems was first awakened. On his return to Vienna he
became the pupil of Professor Gussenbauer, the surgeon, and finally, in
1903, accepted a post as demonstrator at the Otological Clinic under Professor
Politzer. He followed up the theories of Flourens,
Purkinje,
Mach, Breuer
and others, and clarified the physiology and pathology of human vestibular
apparatus. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for his work in this field in
1914. The news of this award reached Barany in a Russian prisoner-of-war
camp; he had been attached to the Austrian army as a civilian surgeon
and had tended soldiers with head injuries, which fact had enabled him
to continue his neurological studies on the correlation of the vestibular
apparatus, the cerebellum and the muscular apparatus. Following the personal
intervention of Prince Carl of Sweden on behalf of the Red Cross, he was
released from the prisoner-of-war camp in 1916 and was presented with
the Nobel Prize by the King of Sweden at Stockholm.
Barany returned to Vienna the same year, but was bitterly disappointed
by the attitude of his Austrian colleagues, who reproached him for having
made only incomplete references in his works to the discoveries of other
scientists, on whose theories they said his work was based. These attacks
resulted in Barany leaving Vienna to accept the post of Principal and
Professor of an Otological Institute in Uppsala, where he remained for
the remainder of his life. Holmgren and a number of famous Swedish otologists
published a paper in defence of Barany.
During the latter
part of his life Barany studied the causes of muscular rheurmatism, and
continued working on a book dealing with this subject even after he had
suffered a stroke and was partially paralysed. Barany married Ida Felicitas
Berger in 1909. They had two sons; the elder became Professor of Pharmacology
at the University of Uppsala, his brother Assistant Professor of Medicine
at the Caroline Institute, Stockholm. They also had a daughter, who married
a physician and lives in the U.S.A.
He died at Uppsala
on April 8, 1936.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921.
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