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  1. Claude Bernard ( French: [bɛʁnaʁ]; 12 July 1813 – 10 February 1878) was a French physiologist. Historian I. Bernard Cohen of Harvard University called Bernard "one of the greatest of all men of science". [1] He originated the term milieu intérieur, and the associated concept of homeostasis (the latter term being coined by Walter Cannon ).

  2. Apr 17, 2024 · Claude Bernard (born July 12, 1813, Saint-Julien, France—died Feb. 10, 1878, Paris) was a French physiologist known chiefly for his discoveries concerning the role of the pancreas in digestion, the glycogenic function of the liver, and the regulation of the blood supply by the vasomotor nerves. On a broader stage, Bernard played a role in ...

    • Reino Virtanen
  3. May 20, 2022 · Claude Bernard is the first and one of the very few French scientists to have been honored with a national funeral. This shows how much this doctor–researcher left an essential mark on the history of science and medicine ( Figure 1 ). Claude Bernard in 1861 in his dress of a professor of the Faculty of Sciences.

    • René Habert
    • Cells. 2022 May; 11(10): 1702.
    • 10.3390/cells11101702
    • 2022/05
  4. Bernard, Claude. Claude Bernard. Within less than a decade, from obscurity in the shadow of Magendie, he had risen to a commanding position in science. In 1854 a chair of general physiology was created for him in the Sorbonne, and he was elected to the Academy of Sciences. When Magendie died in 1855, Bernard succeeded him as full professor at ...

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  6. Later Life and Death: Claude Bernard was appointed as a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1868. He died in Paris on February 10, 1878 aged 64. Bernard was the first person in France to be given a public funeral. Claude Bernard was an eminent French physiologist, noted for his groundbreaking research regarding the ...

  7. May 9, 2018 · Bernard, Claude Claude Bernard (1813–78) was a key figure in French nineteenth-century science, and one of the world's great physiologists. With good reason he has been called the ‘father of experimental medicine’. Bernard was born in St Julien-en-Beaujolais, the son of a winegrower and schoolmaster.

  8. Claude Bernard, (born July 12, 1813, Saint-Julien, France—died Feb. 10, 1878, Paris), French physiologist. He taught at several major French institutions and was named a senator in 1869. He discovered the role of the pancreas in digestion, the glycogenic function of the liver in carbohydrate metabolism, and blood-supply regulation by the ...

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