Yahoo Web Search

  1. Amalia Fleming

    Greek physician, bacteriologist

Search results

    • Amalia Fleming: The great Greek doctor and fighter | ImpacTalk
      • Although she loved literature and writing very much, her father finally managed to convince her to follow his own path and so she studied Medicine at the University of Athens where a little later she was awarded a doctorate. After studying in Paris, she worked at Necker Hospital and later lived in London.
  1. People also ask

  2. Amalia, Lady Fleming, ( née Koutsouri, formerly Vourekas; Greek: Αμαλία Κουτσούρη-Φλέμινγκ; 28 June 1912 – 26 February 1986) was a Greek physician, bacteriologist, human rights activist and politician . Early life and education. Fleming was born in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (now Istanbul, Turkey), in 1912.

  3. Jul 16, 2021 · With the outbreak of World War I, her family moved to Greece and despite the adversity of the time, Amalia received a full education, apparently because of the family’s financial comfort and due to the social status of her father in general, who was synonymous with the bourgeoisie.

  4. May 13, 2024 · Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming is best known for his discovery of penicillin in 1928, which started the antibiotic revolution. For his discovery of penicillin, he was awarded a share of the 1945 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

    • Amalia Fleming education1
    • Amalia Fleming education2
    • Amalia Fleming education3
    • Amalia Fleming education4
  5. Growing up in Athens, Greece, she studied medicine at the University of Athens, with a specialty in bacteriology. After graduation, she accepted a position at the Athens municipal hospital, then married Manoli Vourekis, whose career path was architecture.

  6. Apr 2, 2014 · In London, Fleming finished his basic education at the Regent Street Polytechnic (now the University of Westminster). Fleming was a member of the Territorial Army and served from 1900 to 1914...

  7. Amalia Voureka was a physician, bacteriologist, and Greek Resistance activist who joined the laboratory of Sir Alexander Fleming in 1946 on a scholarship. She had nine research publications between May 1947 and August 1952, four of which were as the single author and three as the first author. Only three were coauthored with Sir Fleming.

  8. www.fleming.gr › impact › fleming-museumFleming Museum

    The core of the Museum is Alexander Fleming’s original archival material and personal effects, which were donated by Amalia Fleming and include photographs of the actual Petri dishes on which Fleming discovered penicillin, a turning point in 20th century pharmaceutical science.

  1. Searches related to Amalia Fleming education

    amalia fleming nosokomeioamalia fleming hospital
  1. People also search for