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Rudolf Virchow (1821-1902) |
One of the most prominent physicians of the 19th
century, German scientist and statesman Rudolf Virchow pioneered the
modern concept of the pathological processes of disease. He emphasized
that diseases arose, not in organs or tissues in general, but
primarily in individual cells. Virchow also contributed to the
development of anthropology as a modern science.
Rudolf Carl Virchow was born on Oct. 13, 1821,
in Schivelbein, Prussia. He studied at the University of Berlin and
graduated as a doctor of medicine in 1843. As a young intern, Virchow
published a paper on one of the two earliest reported cases of
leukemia; this paper became a classic. In 1849, Virchow was appointed
to the chair of pathological anatomy at the University of Würzburg--the
first chair of that subject in Germany. In 1856 Virchow became
director of the Pathological Institute at the University of Berlin.
Virchow's concept of cellular pathology replaced
the existing theory that disease arose from an imbalance of the four
fluid humors of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile).
He applied the cell theory to disease processes and stated that
diseased cells arose from preexisting diseased cells (see Cell ). In
1859 Virchow was elected to the Berlin City Council on which he dealt
mainly with such public health matters as sewage disposal, the design
of hospitals, meat inspection, and school hygiene. He also designed
the new Berlin sewer system. Virchow was elected to the Prussian
National Assembly in 1861 and to the German Reichstag in 1880.
Virchow's work in pathological anatomy had led
him to begin anthropological work with studies of skulls. He was the
organizer of German anthropology, and in 1869 he founded the Berlin
Society for Anthropology, Ethnology, and Prehistory. Virchow died on
Sept. 5, 1902, in Berlin, Germany.
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