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  1. Georg Theodor August Gaffky (17 February 1850 – 23 September 1918) was a Hanover -born bacteriologist best known for identifying bacillus salmonella typhi as the cause of typhoid disease in 1884. Early life and career. Gaffky's parents were the shipping agent Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Gaffky, and Emma Schumacher.

  2. Jan 25, 2017 · Ray Dyer, PhD. Georg Theodor August Gaffky (1850-1918) was a bacteriologist best known for his 1884 discovery of the bacillus responsible for typhoid. Trained as a physician at Berlin's Friedrich Wilhelms Universitaet, Gaffky went on to work as an assistant to Robert Koch in the latter's Berlin laboratory.

  3. Gaffky, Georg Theodor August (b. Hannover, Germany, 17 February 1850; d. Hannover, 23 September 1918) bacteriology, public health. Gaffky was the son of Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Gaffky, a shipping agent, and Emma Wilhelmine Mathilde Schumacher. After attending a Gymnasium in Hannover, he studied medicine at the University of Berlin.

  4. Georg Theodor August Gaffky (* 17. Februar 1850 in Hannover; † 23. September 1918 ebenda) war ein deutscher Bakteriologe und Hygieniker, der 1884 erstmals Typhusbazillen in Reinkultur züchtete.

  5. Georg Theodor August Gaffky Explained. Georg Theodor August Gaffky (17 February 1850 – 23 September 1918) was a Hanover-born bacteriologist best known for identifying bacillus salmonella typhi as the cause of typhoid disease in 1884. Early life and career. Gaffky's parents were the shipping agent Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Gaffky, and Emma ...

  6. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Typhoid | SpringerLink

    The identification of the causative agent of typhoid fever by Carl Joseph Eberth and Georg Theodor August Gaffky in the 1880s (Eberth 1880; Gaffky 1884) not only helped to fortify the concept that typhoid fever spreads by contagious germs, but it also spawned important discoveries related to diagnosis and prevention.

  7. Gaffky, Georg Theodor August, deutscher Bakteriologe und Hygieniker, *17.2.1850 Hannover, †23.9.1918 Hannover; ab 1888 Professor für Hygiene in Gießen, seit 1904 Direktor (Nachfolger von R. Koch) des Instituts für Infektionskrankheiten in Berlin; arbeitete auf dem Gebiet der Infektionsbekämpfung und trug wesentlich zur Etablierung der Bakteriolo...

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