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  1. Umetaro Suzuki (鈴木 梅太郎, Suzuki Umetarō, April 7, 1874 – September 20, 1943) was a Japanese scientist, born in what is now part of Makinohara, Shizuoka, Japan. He was a member of the Imperial Academy, and a recipient of the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure and the Order of Culture.

  2. Japanese researcher Umetaro Suzuki, the father of vitamin research in Japan, was the earliest to identify a vitamin with his discovery in 1910 of aberic acid, today known as vitamin B1.

  3. Learn about Umetaro Suzuki, the scientist who discovered and extracted vitamin B1 from rice bran and vitamin A from cod liver oil. He also invented a synthetic saké that did not require preservatives.

  4. www.nobelprize.org › prizes › themesNobelPrize.org

    Jun 22, 2004 · In Japan, Umetaro Suzuki was prominent in this work, and in the Philippines, American workers were able to save the lives of young babies being suckled by mothers living on little but rice. The invention of the word “vitamin”

  5. Umetaro Suzuki was the founder of vitamin research in Japan. His most important achievement was the isolation from rice bran of what he named Oryzanin, or vitamin B1, which is essential for the treatment of beriberi, a very common disease at the time.

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  6. Sep 29, 2023 · Dr. Suzuki assumed the post of a scientific adviser at Sankyo several years later and contributed to the development of Japan's first synthetic agricultural chemical, the fumigant insecticide “KOKUZOL,” a move that laid the groundwork for Sankyo to advance into the agrochemicals business.

  7. Aug 6, 2015 · In fact, Umetaro Suzuki, one of the institute’s founders, discovered the first vitamin —vitamin B 1, or thiamine—in rice bran in 1910, and continued his research in the area after joining RIKEN.

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