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  1. Official biographies claim Charles Scott Sherrington was born in Islington, London, England, on 27 November 1857, and that he was the son of James Norton Sherrington, a country doctor, and his wife, Anne Thurtell. [9] However James Norton Sherrington was an ironmonger and artist's colourman in Great Yarmouth, not a doctor, and died in Yarmouth ...

  2. Sir Charles Sherrington was one of the outstanding physiologists of his time. He ... Department at the University of Oxford since Sherrington retired in 1936. The glass

    • Zoltán Molnár, Richard E. Brown
    • 2010
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  4. Nov 27, 2021 · In March 1916, Sherrington fought for women to be admitted to the medical school at Oxford. Charles Sherrington retired from Oxford in the year of 1936. Sherrington was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1932 for his research on reflex action and regenerative processes in nerve tissue.

  5. May 6, 2010 · However, a recently rediscovered box of histological slides belonging to Sir Charles Sherrington, a pioneer in spinal cord and motor control research, has survived at the University of Oxford ...

    • Zoltán Molnár, Richard E. Brown
    • 2010
  6. Jan 10, 2008 · Working with C. S. Sherrington, 1918–24. Sir Charles Sherrington FRS (1857–1952) was one of the most notable neurophysiologists of the twentieth century. 1 After studies in Cambridge and London, he became a lecturer in physiology at St Thomas's Hospital, London, then Professor of Physiology at Liverpool in 1895, and then Waynflete Professor ...

    • E.M Tansey
    • 2008
  7. Apr 8, 2024 · Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (born Nov. 27, 1857, London, Eng.—died March 4, 1952, Eastbourne, Sussex) was an English physiologist whose 50 years of experimentation laid the foundations for an understanding of integrated nervous function in higher animals and brought him (with Edgar Adrian) the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1932.

  8. He then joined Liverpool University as professor of physiology (1895–1912) and subsequently held a similar post at Oxford University until his retirement in 1935.Sherrington's early work was in neuroanatomy, mapping the pathways of nerves and their connections.

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