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  1. Aug 29, 2013 · Robert Remak Made Major Contributions to Neurology and Embryology but Was Hampered by anti-Semitism and a Younger Rival Who Took Credit for His Work.

    • David B. Green
    • dbgiht@gmail.com
  2. Aug 25, 2024 · Robert Remak (born July 26, 1815, Posen, Prussia [now Poznań, Pol.]—died Aug. 29, 1865, Kissingen, Bavaria [Germany]) was a German embryologist and neurologist who discovered and named (1842) the three germ layers of the early embryo: the ectoderm, the mesoderm, and the endoderm.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Today's featured Jewish American in Medicine is Robert Remak. Born in Posen (Posnan), Robert Remak came from an Orthodox Jewish family. He was a direct...

  4. Aug 21, 2019 · But the research he used to prove this actually came from a German Jewish scientist named Robert Remak! What can we learn from the history of cell theory? So, what does this story tell us?

  5. Nov 28, 2012 · Robert Remaks grandson, Robert Remak (1888–1942), was a mathematician, and was murdered by the Nazis in Auschwitz. The great neuroscientist Robert Remak died on August 29, 1865, in Bad Kissingen, Germany.

    • Andrzej Grzybowski, Krzysztof Pietrzak
    • 2013
  6. Robert Remak (26 July 1815 29 August 1865) was a Polish/German embryologist, physiologist, and neurologist. He is best known for reducing Karl ernst von baer's four germ layers to three. (Photo by: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

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