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  2. Girolamo Fabrici d'Acquapendente, also known as Girolamo Fabrizio or Hieronymus Fabricius (20 May 1533 – 21 May 1619), was a pioneering anatomist and surgeon known in medical science as "The Father of Embryology ." Life and accomplishments.

  3. Mar 1, 2024 · Hieronymus Fabricius ab Aquapendente (born May 20, 1537, Acquapendente, Italy—died May 21, 1619, Padua) was an Italian surgeon, an outstanding Renaissance anatomist who helped found modern embryology. He spent most of his life at the University of Padua, where he studied under the eminent anatomist Gabriel Fallopius.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Aug 26, 2008 · Fabricius, ab Aquapendente, approximately 1533-1619. Girolamo Fabrici, known as Hieronymus Fabricius in Latin, was given the surname Aquapendente from the city where he was born, near Orvieto, Italy. Born in 1533, Fabrici was the eldest son of a respected noble family, whose coat of arms appears as an illustration in the title page of Fabrici's ...

  5. May 20, 2021 · Hieronymus Fabricius (1537-1619) On May 20, 1533 Hieronymus Fabricius or Girolamo Fabrizio or by his Latin name Fabricus ab Aquapendente also Girolamo Fabrizi d’Acquapendente was born. He was a pioneering anatomist and surgeon known in medical science as “ The Father of Embryology .”.

  6. Oct 20, 2020 · Hieronymus Fabricius ab Aquapendente (1533–1619) described the homonymous bursa in the “De Formatione Ovi et Pulli”, published posthumously in 1621. He also included a figure in which the bursa was depicted. We here present the figure of the bursa of Fabricius, along with corrections of some mislabeling still presents in some anastatic ...

    • Domenico Ribatti, Andrea Porzionato, Aron Emmi, Raffaele De Caro
    • 10.47162/RJME.61.2.31
    • 2020
    • Apr-Jun 2020
  7. Hieronymus Fabricius (hīərŏn´əməs), 1537–1619, Italian anatomist; pupil and successor of Fallopius and teacher of William Harvey at Padua. He was a surgeon, an embryologist, and an anatomist; he described the venous valves but did not fully understand their function.

  8. Italian. Biography Contributors. Nadler. Fabricius, Hieronymous of Aquapendente (1533-1619) Italian physician who discovered valves in the veins in the arms and legs. He did not believe them to be one-way, but said that they slowed the sloshing back and forth of blood.

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