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  1. Aoyama Tanemichi (青山 胤通, June 15, 1859–December 23, 1917) was a medical scientist and doctor specializing in internal medicine. He became a member of the Imperial Japan Academy in 1906, received the first class medal, "Order of the Sacred Treasure", in 1916, and was given the title of Danshaku ( baron ) in 1917.

  2. Tanemichi AOYAMA (June 15, 1859 - December 23, 1917) was a medical scientist and doctor of medicine. He specialized in internal medicine. He was enlisted in the Imperial Academy in 1906, granted the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure in 1916, and conferred baron on December 14, 1917.

  3. Aoyama Tanemichi was a medical scientist and doctor. Background. He was born in Edo, the third son of Aoyama Kagemichi, a member of the Naeki clan. Career. He was employed as a pathology classroom assistant at Tokyo University after graduating from its medical school in 1882.

  4. On June 12 a Japanese team of researchers led jointly by Shibasaburo Kitasato and Aoyama Tanemichi arrived in Hong Kong to try to identify the organism responsible for the plague.

  5. In 1907 Aoyama Tanemichi, dean of Tokyo Imperial University’s Faculty of Medicine, gave a speech on the campus of that institution in which he declared, ‘when it comes to medical science, our nation is a German colony’ (p. 3).

    • Susan L. Burns
    • 2015
  6. English: Baron Aoyama Tanemichi (青山 胤通, June 15, 1859 – December 23, 1917) was a Japanese medical scientist during the Meiji era and Taisho era. 日本語: 男爵 青山 胤通 / 靑山 胤通 (あおやま たねみち、安政6年5月15日(1859年6月15日) – 大正6年(1917年)12月23日)は明治時代から大正時代にかけての日本の医学者。 Media in category "Aoyama Tanemichi" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total.

  7. Feb 24, 2017 · Kumaki, Uzaki, Aoyama Tanemichi [Aoyama Tanemichi] (Tokyo, 1930), pp. 139 – 148. I owe this reference and the quote, which do not appear in standard Japanese accounts, to James Bartholomew. See his “Japanese Moderization and the Imperial Universities, 1876–1920,” Journal of Asian Studies, 37 (May 1978), in press.Google Scholar

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