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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p Bodog Beck (Budapest, Hungary, 1871 – New York City, January 1, 1942) was an American physician. He became famous for his studies about apitherapy.Beck was a product of the central European world of the late nineteenth century that produced such other therapeutic pioneers as Sigmund Freud, Ignaz Semmelweis, the father of modem antisepsis, and Phillip Terc, M.D. of Marburg, Austria, who has justly been identified as the father of modern apitherapy. He was fascinated with nature as a boy. His early years involved him taking on the task of raising his own honey bees. This, in turn, led him deeper into what would become a lifelong exploration into all aspects of the world of the honey bee. He served in his nation's armed forces during World War I, after which he emigrated to the United States where he settled in New York City. By the early 1930s, when Charles Mraz encountered him, he had established a thriving Park Avenue practice among the elite of New York's upper east side. Though he was on the staff of a local hospital. Saint Mark's, as a medical practitioner, his first love was apitherapy and it was to this discipline that he assiduously devoted himself until his death.. }

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