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Topic: Girolamo Fabrici


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In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  FABRICI (AB AQUAPENDENTE), Girolamo., De Formatione Ovi, et Pulli Tractatus Accuratissimus.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
It was Fabrici who for the first time exhaustively applied the 'new' Vesalian method of direct observation to the study of embryos.
Fabrici discovered the bursa now called bursa Fabrici and was the first to establish with any degree of accuracy the role played by the ovary and oviduct in the formation of the hen's egg.
Fabrici then speculates further on the various possible causes and conditions on generation, including a discussion of the order in which various parts of the embryo are formed during its development.
www.polybiblio.com /phillips/12.html   (469 words)

  
 Girolamo Fabrici Biography / Biography of Girolamo Fabrici World of Genetics Biography
The anatomical and embryological studies conducted by Girolamo Fabrici were of such importance that he might be considered the founder of modern embryology.
Fabrici became interested in medicine and studied with Gabriele Falloppio and he earned his degree in medicine and philosophy about 1559.
Fabrici gave private lessons in anatomy from 1563 until 1565 when he was appointed to lecture on anatomy and surgery at the University of Padua.
www.bookrags.com /biography-girolamo-fabrici-wog   (258 words)

  
 The Galileo Project
Fabrici was consulted by the Duke of Mantua in 1581, by the Duke of Urbino in 1591, and was called to Florence by the Grand Duke in 1604 to attend his son.
Fabrici practiced medicine as a surgeon and physician, and he amassed a fortune from his practice and from his academic appointment.
G.Favaro, "Contributi alla biografia di Girolamo Fabrici di Acquapendente", in Memorie e documenti per la storia della Universita di Padua, (Padua, 1922), pp.
galileo.rice.edu /Catalog/NewFiles/fabrici.html   (664 words)

  
 Girolamo Fabrici Biography / Biography of Girolamo Fabrici Anatomy and Physiology Biography
Girolamo Fabrici Biography / Biography of Girolamo Fabrici Anatomy and Physiology Biography
Girolamo Fabrici (Fabricius) is perhaps best known as the founder of the modern science of embryology.
Girolamo (also Geronimo) Fabrici (also Fabrizio or Fabricius) was born in the to
www.bookrags.com /biography-girolamo-fabrici-wap   (261 words)

  
 Girolamo Fabrici
Among his pupils there was William Harvey, who later elaborated the cirulation of the blood.
From the senators of Venice Fabrici received numerous honors, and an anatomical theater was built by them for his accommodation.
He died at Venice on the 21st of May 1619.
www.nndb.com /people/017/000100714   (161 words)

  
 History of anatomy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Fabrici was born in Acquapendente, Italy and studied Latin, logic, philosophy, and then medicine at the University of Padua where he was a pupil of Gabriele Falloppio.
Fabricius succeeded Falloppio as professor of anatomy in Padua at the age of 25.
Fabrici from his practice as a surgeon and physician, and from his academic appointment as professor of anatomy and surgery, became rich.
about-anatomy.net /fabricius.html   (440 words)

  
 Untitled Document
The theatre of bodies: the most conspicuous and remarkable Reinassance anatomic atlas, preserved in perfect conditions by time, on display at the Biblioteca Marciana.
G irolamo Fabrici d’Acquapendente, doctor, who lived between 1533 and 1619, was anatomy professor for fifty years at the Padua University.
The word “theatre” mentioned in the title underlines that it is the place where anatomic dissections are carried out: the most ancient one of the Padua University was build in the period in which Fabrici worked as a professor.
www.venicemagazine.it /scienza.htm   (215 words)

  
 [No title]
Father: Artisan; Military; Capparoni says that Girolamo Falloppio was from a noble family which owned property in Padua.
Girolamo Falloppio was initially a goldsmith and then a freeland scoundrel who, as a soldier, undertook the dirty work of his masters.
Favaro thinks that Girolamo, as the soldier client of a tyrant in control of Modena, was doing well by the time of his marriage (aside from the fact that he had contacted syphilis, as part of the fateful French expedition to Naples that may have carried the disease across the alps).
www.clas.ufl.edu /users/rhatch/pages/03-Sci-Rev/SCI-REV-Home/resource-ref-read/major-minor-ind/westfall-dsb/SAM-E-F.htm   (13882 words)

  
 [No title]
\par }{\b Girolamo Fabrici (Aquapendente)}{ (1533-1619) got his MD degree in 1559 at Padua, under Gabriele Fallopio.
By far the most famous of these was Joseph Priestley, whose discovery of oxygen made Hare\rquote s invention possible.}{ \par William Harvey}{\b0 (1578-1657) got his MD degree at Padua under Girolamo Fabrici (Aquapendente).
His mentors were Girolamo Fabrici (Aquapendente) and Giulio Cesare Casseri (who was himself a student of Fabrici).
www.cs.wisc.edu /~david/Geneaology/Biographies.rtf   (12018 words)

  
 FABRICI, Girolamo, De Locutione et eius Instrumentis Liber...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
FABRICI, Girolamo, De Locutione et eius Instrumentis Liber...
Extremely rare first edition of this early monograph on the mechanics of human speech, in a folio format.
This item is listed on Bibliopoly by Martayan Lan, Inc. ; click here for further details.
www.polybiblio.com /marta/468.html   (59 words)

  
 The Scientific Revolution   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Bartolomeo Eustachi was one of the first to write anatomical monographs on particular organs and the namesake of the Eustachian tubes of the ear.
Two who followed Vesalius as Professors at Padua were Gabriele Fallopio (1523-1562), the first to describe what became known as the Fallopian tubes, and Girolamo Fabrici, known as Fabricius of Acquapendente (1533-1619).
Fabricius changed the focus of anatomical study away from the exclusive study of the human body.
www.suite101.com /lesson.cfm/17556/937/4?l=1   (617 words)

  
 Biblioteca Marciana newsletter n.7 - "Next Exhibition"
From 17 December 2004 to 8 May 2005 the Monumental Rooms of the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana (Libreria Sansoviniana) will host the exhibition: "The Theatre of the Body.
The coloured anatomy paintings of Girolamo Fabrici d'Acquapendente," curated by Maurizio Rippa Bonati (catalogue published by Mediamed Edizioni Scientifiche, Milan).
For the first time ever the exhibition will put on show the large oil-paintings illustrating human and animal anatomy conceived by and painted for the great doctor Girolamo Fabrici (c.
marciana.venezia.sbn.it /news7/eng/art9.html   (139 words)

  
 Timeline Of Medicine And Medical Technology [Definition]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Born in Verona, later educated at Padua, he lived and practised in his hometown.
By some criteria this was the start of the modern Great Britain November 17 - Sir Walter Raleigh goes on trial for treason in the converted Great hall of Winchester Castle December 22 -...
[click for more] - Girolamo FabriciHieronymus Fabricius is the Latin name by which the Italian anatomist Girolamo Fabrici (1537-1619) is better known.
www.wikimirror.com /Timeline_of_medicine_and_medical_technology   (11304 words)

  
 Scientific Revolution - Westfall Catalogue - SAM-S - Dr Robert A. Hatch
Gambarana, S.J., 'An Account of the Life of Girolamo Saccheri,' in A.F. Emch, The logica demonstrativa of Girolamo Saccheri, Ph.D. diss., Harvard, 1934 (from a manuscript in Modena).
Pascal, 'Girolamo Saccheri nella vita e nelle opere,' Giornale di matematica di Battaglini, 52 (1914), 229-51.
Scientific Societies: Medical College (Any One); In Morosini's home, a meeting place for the proponents of the new science, he met Galileo and became friendly with Paolo Sarpi, Girolamo Fabrici, Giambattista Della Porta, and Francesco Sagredo, among others.
web.clas.ufl.edu /users/rhatch/pages/03-Sci-Rev/SCI-REV-Home/resource-ref-read/major-minor-ind/westfall-dsb/SAM-S.htm   (17281 words)

  
 Science and Society Picture Library - Print and Poster Sales   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Diorama of the interior showing a dissection in progress.
Hieronymus Fabricius ab Aquapendente (1537-1619), Girolamo Fabrici in Italian, was Professor of Anatomy and Surgery at the University of Padua between 1562 and 1609, and was both a remarkable anatomist of his time and a pioneer of modern embryology.
Fabricius studied foetal development, the function of the larynx as a vocal organ and the changing size of the pupil in the eye.
www.scienceandsocietyprints.com /barcode10284074.aspx   (160 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
astronomer; discovered sunspots & rotation of sun _1587-1615 Fabricius [ab Aquapendente], Hieronymus (also Geronimo Fabrici, Girolamo Fabrizio) It.
John Elroy Sanford) US comedian _1922-1991 Fracastoro, Girolamo (also Jerome Fracastor) It.
1856 _1813-1890 French, Augustus US polit.; gov. of Illinois 1846-1853 _1808-1864 French, Daniel Chester US portrait sculptor; sculpted portrait of Abraham Lincoln for Lincoln Memorial 1918-1922 _1850-1931 Freneau, Philip Morin US poet _1752-1832 Frescobaldi, Girolamo It.
www.sunsite.org.uk /sites/ftp.std.com/obi/Biographical/biog_dict.f   (6349 words)

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