Gaceta Médica de México. 2015;151
762
The professor and the seamstress: an episode
in the life of Jacob Henle
Carlos Ortiz-Hidalgo*
Department of Cell and Tissue Biology, Universidad Panamericana, Ciudad de México, México; Department of Surgical and Molecular Pathology,
Centro Médico ABC, Ciudad de México, México
GACETA MÉDICA DE MÉXICO
HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE
Correspondence:
*Carlos Ortiz-Hidalgo
Departamento de Patología Quirúrgica y Molecular
Centro Médico ABC
Sur 136, 116
Col. Las Américas, C.P. 01120, Ciudad de México, México
E-mail: cortiz@abchospital.com
Date of reception: 26-12-2014
Date of acceptance: 07-01-2015
I
ntroduction
The story that is going to be told describes a pas-
sage in the life of a great character in the history of
medicine, Friedrich Gustav Jacob Henle (1809-1885).
Henle is known for his morphological studies, which
led to incorporate his name to several structures of the
human body. He is considered to be the creator of
modern histology and one of the greatest anatomists
of all times, whose impact on medicine, according to
Newell, can be compared to that by Andreas Vesalius
1
.
Of his numerous morphological findings, perhaps the
most widely known are Henle´s loop in the kidney and
Henle’s internal root sheath of the hair follicle
2
, but
there are more than 10 Henle eponyms (Table 1).
P
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Gac Med Mex. 2015;151:762-9
Abstract
Jacob Henle was a great German anatomist and one of the most important histologists of all times. One of the most commonly
used eponymous terms in renal histology is the loop of Henle, but many other anatomical and pathological findings are associated
with his name. During his stay in Zurich he fell in love with Elise Egolff who worked as a maid and seamstress in the house of
one of his friends. No one could ever imagine how the wide social chasm that separated the servant-girl and the professor could
be bridged. Henle arranged for his sister Marie to educate Elise and give her social polish. In a short time Elise was transformed
into a lady of the world. A year and a half later Jacob and Elise were married. This episode inspired the novelist Auerbach to
write the novel “The Professor’s Wife”, and the play “Pygmalion” by George B Shaw.
(Gac Med Mex. 2015;151:762-9)
Corresponding author: Carlos Ortiz Hidalgo, cortiz@abchospital.com
KEY WORDS: Jacob Henle. Elise Egloff.
Henle was a student and close collaborator of Jo-
hannes Peter Müller (1801-1858); coworker of Rudolf
Virchow (1821-1902), Theodor Schwann (1810-1882),
Albert von Kölliker (1817-1905), Friedrich Schlemm
(1795-1858), Moritz Heinrich Romberg (1795-1873),
and Friedrich Sigmund Merkel (1845-1919) (who de-
scribed the Merkel cells, married Anna, Henle’s daugh-
ter, and succeeded him as anatomy professor at the
University of Göttingen); he was teacher of Robert
Koch (1843-1910) and Heinrich Wilhelm Gottfried
Waldeyer (1836-1921) and great friend of the musician
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) and of the polymath
Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859)
3
.
A curious episode of Henle’s personal life was that
of his first marriage with the seamstress and governess
Elise Egloff (Fig. 1), a romance that inspired the novels
C. Ortiz-Hidalgo:
The professor and the seamstress: an episode in the life of Jacob Henle
763
Bernard Shaw, was awarded with an Oscar. In 1964,
a musical remake was produced, My Fair Lady, direct-
ed by George Cukor and with Rex Harrison and Audrie
Hepburn on the leading roles (Fig. 2). The story of
Eliza Doolittle resembles that of Elise Egloff, Jacob
Henle’s first wife
4,5
.
Jacob Henle
Friedrich Gustav Jacob Henle was born on July 19
th
1809 in Fürth, a small Bavarian city, at 10 km from
Nüremberg, in the bossom of a Jewish family. His fa-
ther, Wilhelm Henle, was a tradesman, and his mother,
Helene Sophia Diespeck, the daughter of a rabbi from
Baiersdorf
4
. In those times, many ecucated German
Jews saw conversion to Catholicism as a route for
social climbing and, for that reason Jacob decided to
convert to Protestantism. He was a very brilliant stu-
dent, with ability to learn languages (he spoke German,
English, French, Italian and Danish); he played the
violin and the cello and sang very well. Music tied him
in close friendship with Felix Mendelssohn, with whom
he also shared his Jewish background. Thanks to his
love for music he met Johannes Peter Müller, who be-
came his academic advisor. It was Müller who advised
him to study medicine, and Jacob was admitted in the
University of Bonn in October 1827 (at 18 years of age)
and graduated as a physician on April 4
th
1832 with the
thesis entitled De membrana Pupillari Aliisque Oculi
Membranas Pellucentibus (About the pupillary mem-
brane and other translucid membranes of the eye). His
interest for anatomy is evidenced in a letter he wrote to
his parents: “I don’t know better nourishment for imag-
ination than the beautiful formation of the human body
constructed by individual bones and muscles that I
know very well, and that show a perfect assembly”
3,4
.
Table 1. Henle eponyms
– External sphincter of the bladder (Henle’s sphincter)
– Internal root sheath of hair (Henle’s layer)
– Thin renal tubule (loop of Henle)
– Trachoma glands of Henle (conjunctival lymphoid
follicles)
– Henle’s membrane-lamina basalis choroidea (Bruchs
membrane)
– Nervous stratum (stratum nerveum) of Henle (retinal
layer composed exclusively by cones and rods)
– Henle’s fibers (photoreceptor internal fibers)
– Henle’s layer (plexiform external layer of the retina)
– Henle’s fiber layer of the macula lutea
– Henle’s ampulla (external half of uterine tube)
– Henle’s layer of internal cremaster
– Hassall-Henle warts (bodies) (small excrescences of the
Descemet membrane of the cornea)
– Henle’s fissure (fibrous tissue between cardiac muscle
cells)
– Henle’s ligament (tendons of the transverse muscle of
abdomen)
– Henle’s sheath (perineurium)
– Vascular endothelium (of Henle)
– Henle’s spine (suprameateal spine that serves as a
landmark in the mastoid area)
– Henle’s demodex folliculorum
– Henle’s internal cremaster
Regina, by Gottfried Keller (1819-1890), and die Frau
Professorin (The Professor’s wife), by Berthold Auer-
bach, published in 1846
3,4
, and the plays Dorf und
Stadt (Village and city), by Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer
(1800-1868) and Pygmalion (based on the story by the
Roman poet Ovidius The metamorphoses, where Pyg-
malion is presented as a sculptor in love of one of his
sculptures), published in 1913 by George Bernard
Shaw (1856-1950), who was awarded with the 1925
Literature Nobel Prize. In George Bernard Shaw`s play,
the central plot develops at Covent Gardens, London,
around the florist Eliza Doolittle, whose manners and
vulgar language stir the interest of phonetics professor
Henry Higgins and his friend, colonel Pickering, with
whom Higgins bets that he is able to teach the young
girl good manners and to speak educately, and to
make her pass for a high society lady in six months.
Higgins manages to turn Eliza into an educated and
refined woman, and ends up falling in love with her,
the woman he has sculptured according to his wishes,
as in the Pygmalion myth. This play was adapted to
the movies in 1938, with Wendy M. Hiller (1912-2003)
as the protagonist, and won the Oscar for best adapt-
ed script, which meant that for the first, and so far the
only time in history, the winner of a Nobel Prize, George
Figure 1. Jacob and Elise (c. 1846).
Gaceta Médica de México. 2015;151
764
At the University of Bonn, Henle was an active mem-
ber of the fraternity Burschenschaften, a type of asso-
ciation inspired by liberal and nationalistic ideas; Ja-
cob accepted the bravery and honor tests imposed by
the fraternity and took part in combats putting his life
at risk. Thanks to his anatomical works, we know that
young Henle was very skilled with the knife at the dis-
secting room, but he did considerably less well when
he engaged in duels, since once he received a wound
to his right cheek that branded him for life; in photo-
graphs he appears almost always turning his face
right, possibly to cover the wound.
For some time, Henle continued his studies in Hei-
delberg, where he had remarkable teachers, such as
the great obstetrician Franz Naegele (1778-1851) and
the anatomists Friedrich Arnold (1803-1890) and Frie-
drich Tiedemann (1781-1861), among others, but he
returned to Bonn to work at Müller’s side, as he ex-
plains in a letter to his parents, “to work under Müller’s
‘eye’ and be able to consult in case of doubt”.
When he completed his studies, Henle travelled to
Paris with Müller to visit the zoologist Georges Cuvier
(1769-1832), considered to be the father of compara-
tive anatomy. Subsequently, he returned to Germany
and moved to Berlin (capital city of Prussia) to work
under the guardianship of the Swedish-descendant
German anatomist and father of helminthology Israel
Karl Asmund Rudolphi (1771-1832) and Friedrich
Schlemm (1795-1858). Rudolphi died a few months
after Henle’s arrival, and was succeeded by his mentor
Johannes P. Müller, which turned Müller into the central
figure of Germanic medicine of those times. Müller
appointed Henle as prosector, with a salary of 480
thaler a year, and associate editor of Archiv für Anat-
omie, Physiologie, the most important journal until the
appearance in 1847 of Virchows Archiv
3,6
. On this pe-
riod of his life, Henle met Schwann and Matthias Jakob
Schleiden (1804-1881), authors of the cell theory
7
.
Schleiden and Schwann had noticed some character-
istics of the microscopic structure of animals and plants,
in particular the presence of nuclei (previously described
by the British botanist Robert Brown in 1831), and in
1839 they indicated that the cell constituted the funda-
mental unit of living beings. Schwann and Schleiden
were great friends, and Schwann tells that during a
conversation with Schleiden in Berlin, he suggested
the idea that would originate the cell theory: “One day
that I was having dinner with Schleiden (October 1837),
Figure 2. The My Fair Lady movie and the Pygmalion play.
C. Ortiz-Hidalgo:
The professor and the seamstress: an episode in the life of Jacob Henle
765
this illustrious botanist indicated to me the important
function of the nucleus in the development of plant
cells. I remembered having seen a similar organ in cells
of the tadpole spinal chord, and on that moment I
understood the importance my discovery would have
if I managed to demonstrate that the nucleus of the
spinal chord cells played the same role than the nu-
cleus of plants in the development of vegetals”
7
.
During his stay in Berlin, exactly on July the 2
nd
1835,
Henle was arrested and sent to prison for four weeks
for his history as a member of the Burschenschaften,
and was not released until the intervention of Von Hum-
boldt and his mentor Müller. Once out of jail, Jacob
was received with much affection by all his acquain-
tances in Berlin. People say that a lady approached
and gave him a kiss when he was walking by the street,
owing to the emotion she felt by seeing him walk free;
Henle wrote his parents about the whole event and told
them that, with that kind of awards, he would gladly
spend another month in jail!
3
.
In 1838, Henle submitted a work to the University of
Berlin applying for a teaching position, Symbolae ad
Anatomiam Villorium Intestinalium Imprimis Eorum Ep-
ithelii et Vasorum Lacteorum (Contribution to intestinal
villi anatomy with special reference to the epithelium
and lymph or lacteal vessels), where he described his
observations on the intestinal internal surface (epithe-
lium) and the lymphatic vessels. The important contri-
bution of this work was the discovery that the internal
surface of the intestine was lined by epithelial cells, a
discovery that led him to study the surface of different
organs of the body, and observed everything was lined
by epithelium. The concept of epithelial tissue is one
of Henle’s most relevant contributions to histology. He
described that all mucous membranes were covered
by a thin layer of cells, rather than by “coagulated
mucus”, as then it was assumed. In 1838, in an article
entitled “Ueber die Ausbreitung des Epithelium im
menschlichen Körper” (On the distribution of epithelia
in the human body), he established the characteristics
of epithelia and divided them in three types: Pflasterep-
ithelium (squamous epithelium), Cylinderepithelium
(columnar epithelium) and Flimmerepithelium (ciliary
epithelium); in addition, he correctly indicated that cil-
ia were nothing else than modifications of the cell
membrane. As he illustrated in his book, this epithelial
tissue was not only present in the gastrointestinal tract,
but also lined serous cavities, the cerebral ventricles,
the blood vessels, the larynx and the pharynx
3,4,6
.
It is possible that due to his incarceration Henle was
not happy in Berlin, and in the spring of 1840, just
after having celebrated his 31
st
birthday, he was ap-
pointed anatomy professor and director of the Institute
of Anatomy of the recently founded University of Zu-
rich. The great anatomist Albert von Kölliker (1817-
1905) (he had been his student in Berlin and, among
many other contributions, he demonstrated the conti-
nuity of axons with the neuronal body) became his
prosector. In Zurich he published, in 1841, the famous
general anatomy text Allgemeine Anatomie, which was
the first book dedicated to histology, where Schleiden
and Schwann’s recently described cell theory was pre-
sented
2,3,8
(Fig. 3). This book served as an introduction
to pathology as well. In the preface, Henle indicates:
“Tissue physiology is the foundation of general and
rational pathology, which tries to understand the mor-
bid process and symptoms as necessary reactions of
organic matter, endowed with peculiar powers that are
non-transferrable to external abnormal influences”.
At the University of Zurich, Karl von Pfeufer (1806-
1869) was appointed head of the Department of Inter-
nal Medicine, and soon Henle and Pfeufer became
inseparable friends and academic collaborators. Both
Figure 3. Cover of the book Allgemeine Anatomie (General ana-
tomy), published in Zurich in 1841. It was the first text dedicated to
histology, where Schleiden and Schwann’s then recently described
cell theory was presented.
Gaceta Médica de México. 2015;151
766
founded the so-called school of rational medicine and,
in 1862, the journal Zeitschrift für rationelle Medizin
(Journal of Rational Medicine) became one of the most
important of the 19
th
century
3,5
. These close friends were
invited to Heidelberg, and both accepted the invitation,
and therefore Henle continued his studies on histology
research at the University of Heidelberg (1844-1852).
Subsequently, he was appointed professor at the Uni-
versity of Göttingen (1852-1885), where he stayed for
33 years. There, he directed the Institute of Anatomy
and died at the age of 76 years, being a professor and
head of the Department of Anatomy and Physiology.
It is difficult to decide which Henle’s most important
contribution was, since he studied practically the entire
anatomy and development of the human body, but pos-
sibly the best known eponym is Henle’s loop of the kid-
ney
6,8
. In January 1862, Henle presented before the Sci-
entific Society of Göttingen his findings on the fine
structure of the kidney. In this manuscript entitled Zur
Anatomie der Niere, he indicated that there were two
types of tubules in the renal medulla: one was the al-
ready known papillary tubule of Bellini, and the other
were tubules of smaller diameter that were lined by a plain
squamous epithelium and ran parallel to the collecting
ducts and returned forming a “lasso” or “loop” towards
the medulla (Fig. 4). Henle could not show the connec-
tion of these newly described tubules with the rest of
the collecting system, but three years later, Franz Sch-
weigger-Seidel (1834-1871), a German physiologist
born in Weißenfels, associated these Henle’s tubules
in continuity with the rest of the renal tubular system
(Schweigger-Seidel’s name is not applied to any renal
structure, but the periarteriolar sheath that covers the
penicillate arteries of the spleen bears his name)
10
.
More than 100 yars had to elapse for Henle’s loop
function to become known and be incorporated to the
concept of countercurrent multiplier mechanism that
allows for an adequate osmotic means to be provided
in order to concentrate the urine.
Another important contribution of Henle was the dis-
covery of the presence of microorganisms in sick ani-
mals’ secretions. Henle proposed the term contagion
as the infection mechanism in the book Pathologische
Untersuchungen (Pathological investigations), pub-
lished in Berlin in 1840
11
, but he failed to demonstrate
the presence of these microorganisms as a direct
cause of any disease. Many years later, one of his
students, Robert Koch, a student of the University of
Figure 4. Cover of the book Zur Anatomie der Niere, published in 1862, where Henle described the loop that bears his name.
C. Ortiz-Hidalgo:
The professor and the seamstress: an episode in the life of Jacob Henle
767
Göttingen, made Henle’s prophecy on the bacterial
theory fruitful. On December the 6
th
1841, while he was
working at the University of Zurich, he presented, be-
fore the Natural Sciences Society of Zurich, the descrip-
tion of Demodex foliculorum, a mite that lives in hair
follicles. These observations were published in the local
newspaper (!), and possibly for this reason this discov-
ery remained unnoticed for a long time
3
. According to
many of his students, Henle’s Annual report, which was
duly published from 1856 to 1871, was eagerly awaited.
This manuscript covered the most important advances
on pathology, histology and special and general anat-
omy. These yearly publications became famous for their
comments, and some say that early spring every year,
when the reports appeared, many scientists of that time
trembled as they went through the pages looking for
Henle’s comments on their investigations
2-4
.
Henle had a disagreement with his teacher Müller
with regard to the use of the microscope. Henle claimed
that the use of this instrument should be mandatory for
medicine students for microscopic anatomy recogni-
tion. Conversely, Müller considered tat the microscope
should be used only for research. It took a couple of
years for Henle to convince the entire medical commu-
nity of that time on the convenience of mandatory use
of the microscope, and Purkinje in Poland and Henle
in Germany established the subject of microscopy (his-
tology) in the medical curriculum.
The professor and the seamstress
When Jacob decided to move from Germany to Swit-
zerland, he surely did not imagine that destiny was
waiting right across the border. Upon his arrival to
Zurich, Jacob fell in love with the daughter of a captain
of the army, who immediatelly accepted his marriage
proposal, but a few days later the lady broke his heart,
since Henle found out that she had accepted his pro-
posal only to make her former fiancee jealous and this
way conquer him back. The lady had taken advantage
of Henle, she had applied him one of the oldest tricks
in love issues. Heartbroken, Jacob took refuge in his
studies and in music, and learned to play the cello
4
.
During his stay in Zurich, Henle met Elise Egloff, the
governess of the house he lived in, home of Carl Jacob
Löwig (1803-1890), a German chemist, discoverer of
bromine
4,5
. Chronics say that Elise trembled with joy
whenever she served Jacob at table and listened with
emotion, behind the kitchen closed door, when he
raised his voice in song or played the violin. One day,
Mrs. Löwig saw Elise almost with tears of passionate
rapture listening Henle sing, and she immediately in-
formed Jacob that Elise was in love with him. Jacob
then confessed that he was also very fond of Elise; he
even said that the first time he laid eyes on her he had
a deep love sensation and wrote: “And there occurred
the most ludicruous thing that could ever happen to a
wordly cavalier in a relationship of this kind. I interest-
ed myself not only in the girl’s beauty but also in her
soul”. A few years before, he had written his parents
that as soon as he completed his studies “he would
look for a good job (…) and marry a young, beautiful,
intelligent and rich young girl, who spoke French,
played the piano and knew how to ride horses”. How-
ever, Cupid tied Jacob with Elise.
Elise Egloff was born in Tägerwilen, Switzerland, on
January 21, 1821
5
. She was raised at her grandfather’s
home, Hans Jakop Egloff and, after his death, Elise
learned needlework and worked as a seamstress before
she started working as a governess with the Löwig fam-
ily
3,5
. At 21 years of age, when she met Jacob, she was
a very beautiful young girl
5
. When Elise noticed she was
in love with Jacob Henle, she could not bear the fact of
not being able to engage in a sentimental relationship
with him due to sociocultural differences (he was al-
ready a professor and she, a maid), and she decided
to leave the Löwig’s home and work as a seamstress.
Henle looked for her, found her, and told her that, since
they came from socially different worlds, their love was
impossible. However, in spite of having agreed not to
see each other again, their mutual passion swept them
closer and closer together, and Henle insisted on vis-
iting the place where Elise mended clothes.
The cultural abyss that divided them was wide, and
due to the prejudices of the epoch, it was highly un-
likely for them to be able to establish a sentimental
relationship. Given that Jacob used to visit Elise fre-
quently, social rumors started spreading on the possi-
ble relationship of the professor and the seamstress,
and German society of those days was ready to com-
pletely engulf them. However, as we will see, the way
Jacob and Elise confronted the situation was the per-
fect shield against those social prejudices.
Listening
Phonetically reading
In 1844, Henle was invited to work at the University
of Heidelberg and thought that he could bring Elise
along – who already possessed more charm and beau-
ty than many a high-born dame – and educate her to
Gaceta Médica de México. 2015;151
768
become his wife. He then spoke with his sister Marie,
told her that he had fallen in love with a good young
girl, although not cultivated enough to become his wife,
and asked for help to educate her. In the spring of
1844, Henle brought Elise to Marie’s home in the city
of Traben-Trarbach and, aided by her husband
Mathieu, Marie educated Elise. While Mathieu taught
her classic poetry, Marie instructed her in music, piano,
drawing and in the intricacies of social intercourse.
Some of the letters sent by Elise to Jacob have been
preserved. In one of them, dated on February 6
th
1843,
and entitled “Most venerable Herr Professor”, she nar-
rates her stay at his sister house and tells him how
much she misses him. In these letters of that “socio-
cultural training” period, currently in possession of one
of Jacob’s granddaughters, Lizzie Marie Stein, one can
notice the progressive change in the writing style and
spelling; in the first ones, there are different spelling
and stylistic mistakes, and those written years later
show much better style
13
(Fig. 5).
In a year and a half Elise was transformed from a
humble seamstress into a lady of the world who moved
amid general approbation in various social circles. On
October 1845, Jacob and Elise met after one and a
half year, and Jacob was amazed with the transforma-
tion. On December 1845 Jacob sent a letter to his fa-
ther that read: “Now I am engaged to a young girl from
Tägerwilen that I met in Zurich. She is orphan and poor,
but beautiful and brave, and her name is Elise Egloff.
She has been living for a year with my sister, who has
helped her to acquire a good German education, since
she was not educated enough for Swiss standards,
given my high academic rank”.
The engagement was announced on the first months
of 1846, and on March of that same year, young, beau-
tiful, and now educated Elise Egloff, of 25 years of age,
became Elise Henle, the professor’s wife (Frau Profes-
sor), who then was 35 years old. They married in Trier,
the oldest city of Germany, located on the right bank
of the Moselle river, and spent their honeymoon in Vi-
enna, where they were greeted by the foremost medi-
cal men of the day, including Carl von Rokitansky
(1804-1878), who were impressed by Elise’s charm
and beauty. On their way back to Heidelberg, Jacob
and Elise attended a theater play in Weimar. The Grand
Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Charles Frederick
(1783-1853), who was among the audience, had some-
one sent to inquire who Henle’s beautiful companion
was. This situation did not upset Jacob, but on the
contrary, he was flattered. When the play concluded,
they were invited by the Grand Duke to have a glass
Figure 5. Oldest known letter from Elise Egloff, dated on February
6
th
1843; it reads: “Most venerable Herr Professor”.
of wine and Elise also captivated the ladies of royalty
without any of them suspecting that some years before
she might have well been their seamstress
4
.
Unfortunately, the Henle-Egloff marriage lasted a lit-
tle less than three years, since Elise contracted pulmo-
nary tuberculosis and died at 5 in the afternoon of
February 21
st
1848 at 27 years of age in Jacob’s arms.
They had two children: Carl, who was born in Decem-
ber 1846, and Elise, born in January 1848. Society
criticized Henle, saying that Elise’s intense sociocultur-
al change would have favored the progression of the
disease. Merkel (his son-in-law) stated: “It is highly
possible, even probable, that the strong emotion and
the powerful spiritual work of the last two years have
accelerated the disastrous outbreak of suffering”
14
.
Elise was buried in the Mount of Heidelberg cementery,
in the presence of professors Reinhard Blum and Lud-
wig Hausser, both Jacob’s colleagues at the University
of Heidelberg. Henle could not attend his wife’s funeral
due to an ailment. It appears that the Henle-Egloff
couple lived very happily. Chronics say that Elise, in
addition to beauty, had an extraordinary energy, very
good attitude and great capacity to happily enjoy life,
an emotion that she shared and knew how to spread
to her family. One year after Elise’s death, Henle trav-
elled to Coblenz to visit his father and there he met a
friend of her sister Helene, Marie Richter, the daughter
of a Prussian army officer, and Jacob fell in love once
C. Ortiz-Hidalgo:
The professor and the seamstress: an episode in the life of Jacob Henle
769
more. A few months later they got married and had four
children: Adolf, who became a surgeon, Anna, who
married Friedrich Merkel, Sophie and Emma. His chil-
dren were brought up in Göttingen, where Henle was
appointed professor in 1852 and where he worked for
the rest of his professional carreer.
Epilogue
As previously mentioned, in 1845, Berthold Auer-
bach knew about the story of Jacob and Elise and
wrote the work entitled Die Frau Professorin (The pro-
fessor’s wife)
15
. In 1847, Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer read
Auerbach’s novel and wrote a play that was very suc-
cessful. Auerbach protested arguing plagiarism, and
tried unsuccessfully to sue Pfeiffer for copyright in-
fringement. In spite of this issue, the play contributed
to the popularity of Jacob and Elise’s story, who per-
sonally met Auerbach. After Elise’s decease, Jacob
and Berthold further strehgthened their friendship,
since Auerbach had lost his wife in childbirth around
that same time. However, when Henle knew that the
story of the novel Auerbach had written was based on
the intimacy of his marriage, the friendship was broken,
since he felt betrayed when he knew that his friend had
taken advantage of a very intimate and personal situ-
ation and wrote: “I was really surprised by the way he
[Auerbach] used my tragic marriage for his work”.
Jacob Henle was a great human being and, as a teach-
er, he was highly appreciated and loved by his students.
He was a brilliant speaker, and some of his former stu-
dents used to say that his lessons were entertaining,
stimulating, a taste of wisdom seasoned with varied pro-
posals on the function and origin of different human tis-
sues, with a highly unique touch of humor
3,6,16
. Henle’s
highly productive and plentiful academic work can be
divided in four periods: the Berlin period (1834-1840), the
Zurich period (1840-1844), the Heidelberg period (1844-
1852) and the final Göttingen period (1852-1885).
His family life was very quiet and he had many
friends, who gathered at his place to sing and play the
piano and the violin. Numerous students shone around
Henle, including Emil Du-Bois Reymond, Ernst Wilhelm
von Brücke (1819-1892), Albert von Kölliker, Theodor
Langhans, Friedrich Merkel and Wilhelm Waldeyer,
who payed him tribute for his retirement and told him:
“Most respected professor, please accept our sincere
gratefulness for all you have been for science and for
us. We congratulate you for this great day we celebrate
and want to express our wishes that you may have
many more days of true happiness and may plenty
beneficial activity be granted to you”. Unfortunately,
these wishes didn’t come true, since Jacob Henle died
on May the 13
th
1885 of a renal sarcoma with metas-
tases to the vertebrae at 76 years of age
2
. There is a
street in Göttingen with his name: Jakob-Henle-Straße,
and another in his native town Fürth.
There was no part of the human body that old Jacob
(der alte Jakop), as his students used to call him, did not
explore under the microscope and, with no doubt, Hen-
le is the greatest histologist of all times. He also made
incursions in comparative anatomy, in the anatomical
structure of different animals and in anthropology. He
wrote the biographs of three of his friends, Albrecht von
Haller, Ernst Heinrich Weber and Theodor Schwann, and
had his last work published in 1844, on the human nail
and the horse’s hoof. Henle elevated anatomy to an
unprecedented degree of perfection, which has served
as the basis to all contemporary investigators of morpho-
logical sciences. As written by American poet Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) in A psalm of life:
Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time.
Footprints, that perhaps another,
Sailing o’er life’s solemn main,
A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
Seeing, shall take heart again.
References
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3. Otis L. Training of Jakob Henle and Theodor Schwann. Muller’s Lab.
Oxford University Press Inc; 2007. p. 42-75.
4. Robinson V. The life of Jacob Henle. Medical Life Company; 1921.
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http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elise_Egloff.
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16. Friedrich Gustav Jacob Henle. Whonamedit a dictionary of medical
eponyms. [Internet] Consultado en diciembre de 2014. Disponible en:
http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/710.html.
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