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  1. Émile Duclaux. Émile Duclaux (24 June 1840 – May 2, 1904) was a French microbiologist and chemist born in Aurillac, Cantal . He studied at the College of Aurillac, the Lycée Saint-Louis in Paris and at École Normale Supérieure. In 1862 he began work as an assistant in the laboratory of Louis Pasteur (1822–1895).

    • June 24, 1840, Aurillac, Cantal, Auvergne Rhône-Alpes, France
    • May 3, 1904 (aged 63), Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France
    • 3; Jacques Eugene Duclaux
    • Physicist, Biologist and Chemist
  2. Mar 29, 2019 · Émile Duclaux. Émile Duclaux is the first of the five musketeers to have joined Louis Pasteur (Fig. 2). After his aggregation of Sciences at École Nationale Supérieure, he joined his ...

    • Jean-Marc Cavaillon, Sandra Legout
    • 2019
  3. Aug 19, 2014 · Émile Duclaux, who lived from 1840 to 1904, was a chemist and microbiologist, and he had studied with Pasteur at the École Normale. He had assisted Pasteur in his efforts to refute the theory of spontaneous generation, according to which living organisms could emerge from non-living matter.

  4. Duclaux, Émile. ( b Aurillac, Cantal, France, 24 June 1840; d. Paris, France, 2 May 1904) biochemistry. Duclaux belonged to that group of physicists and chemists, still limited in the second half of the nineteenth century, who through their work increased our knowledge of living matter. It appears, however, that his lasting fame derives less ...

  5. Émile Duclaux was a French microbiologist and chemist born in Aurillac, Cantal.

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  7. Portrait of Émile Duclaux. Portrait photograph of French microbiologist and chemist Émile Duclaux (1840-1904). Duclaux began assisting Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) in 1862. He became the second director of the Pasteur Institute after Pasteur's directorship. (Text underneath portait) "Emile Duclaux, Pasteur's early assistant in fermentation and ...

  8. In 1859, the pioneering French microbiologist Émile Duclaux began his academic career at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. In 1862, he became an agrégé in physical sciences and took up a position as Pasteur 's laboratory assistant. In 1865, having completed his studies, he left Paris for posts at Tours and subsequently at the Faculty ...