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  1. Albert Kölliker was born in Zürich, Switzerland. His early education was carried on in Zürich, and he entered the university there in 1836. After two years, however, he moved to the University of Bonn, and later to that of Berlin, becoming a pupil of noted physiologists Johannes Peter Müller and of Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle.

    • Swiss
  2. Mar 19, 2024 · Rudolf Albert von Kölliker (born July 6, 1817, Zürich, Switz.—died Nov. 2, 1905, Würzburg, Ger.) was a Swiss embryologist and histologist, one of the first to interpret tissue structure in terms of cellular elements. Kölliker became professor of physiology and comparative anatomy at the University of Zürich in 1844; in 1847 he ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jul 6, 2020 · Rudolf von Kölliker (1817-1902) On July 6, 1817 , Swiss anatomist and physiologist Rudolf Albert von Kölliker was born. He was one of the founders of embryology. His thorough microscopic work on tissues enabled him to be among the first to identify their structure. He showed that they were made up of cells, that did not freely come into being ...

  4. Sep 30, 2022 · They were discovered in 1857 by Swiss scientist Albert von Kölliker and named in 1898 by Carl Benda, a German microbiologist who coined the name from the Greek “mitos-,” meaning “thread,” and “-chondros,” meaning “granule,” because mitochondria inside of a cell tend to form long dotted chains.

  5. Rudolph Albert von Kölliker. 1817-1905. Swiss physiologist, anatomist, biologist, and zoologist who made landmark achievements through his use of the microscope. Kölliker is famous for his knowledge of histology, a branch of anatomy involving study of the minute structure of plant and animal tissues. His memoir on cephalopods (marine mollusks ...

  6. Reference entries. (1817–1905) Swiss histologist and embryologistBorn in Zurich, Switzerland, Kölliker qualified in medicine at Heidelberg in 1842 and later held professorships at Zurich and Würzburg. Celebrated for his microscopic work on tissues, he provided much evidence to show that cells cannot arise freely, but only from existing cells.

  7. Rudolf von Kölliker. (6 Jul 1817 - 2 Nov 1905) Swiss anatomist, physiologist and histologist who was one of the founders of embryology. His thorough microscopic work on tissues enabled him to be among the first to identify their structure as being made from component cells that developed from existing cells.

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