“…Omitted were an old observation by Wernicke [73] for reason of lacking details, then Kornycy's [47] case, in which a large massive hemorrhage complicated a small softening so that one cannot be sure whether or not also the edema following the hemorrhage accounted for the eye symptoms, that of V. Hagen [33], where the larger lesion was found in medial thalamus probably being here continuous with a much smaller lesion in rostral periaquaeductal region, and that by Olson and Millitzer [53] where also a massive hemorrhage in the thalamus protruded into the rostral midbrain tegmentum. Too many complicating lesions finally prevented also a fully guaranteed clinico-pathological correlation in the otherwise interesting ob servation by Hatcher and Klintworth [34],…”