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  1. Giovanni Battista Grassi (27 March 1854 – 4 May 1925) was an Italian physician and zoologist, best known for his pioneering works on parasitology, especially on malariology. He was Professor of Comparative Zoology at the University of Catania from 1883, and Professor of Comparative Anatomy at Sapienza University of Rome from 1895 until his ...

  2. May 14, 2021 · Giovanni Battista Grassi was born in a village near Milan in Italy on March 27, 1854. His formative years were spent in natural, rural surroundings. He enrolled as a medical student in the famous University of Pavia where, among others, the cellular physiologist Golgi was one of the faculties. After earning MD degree in 1878, he turned his ...

    • Abhijit Chaudhury
    • 10.4103/tp.tp_21_21
    • 2021
    • Trop Parasitol. 2021 Jan-Jun; 11(1): 16-18.
  3. May 11, 2018 · Grassi, Giovanni Battista. ( b. Rovellasca, Italy, 27 March 1854; d. Rome, Italy, 4 May 1925) entomology, parasirology. The son of Luigi Grassi, a municipal official, and of Costanza Mazzuchelli, a peasant of unusual intelligence, Grassi was educated at Saronno. From 1872 he studied medicine at Pavia, graduating in 1878.

  4. Other articles where Giovanni Battista Grassi is discussed: malaria: Malaria through history: …and in 1898, in Rome, Giovanni Grassi and his colleagues discovered a parasite of human malaria in an Anopheles mosquito. A bitter controversy that ensued between Ross and Grassi and their respective partisans over priority of discovery was one of the most vitriolic public quarrels in modern ...

  5. The discovery of the mosquito as a vector for malaria parasite was an important discovery at the turn of the 19 th century for which Sir Ronald Ross received the Nobel Prize in 1902. Battista Grassi, an Italian physician and a zoologist is also credited with this discovery and he described the species of the mosquito and proved the transmission ...

  6. Mar 18, 2021 · ‘These two fundamental facts were demonstrated experimentally in 1898, during work with a patient at S. Spirito Hospital in Sassia, by Amico Bignami, Giuseppe Bastianelli and Giovanni Battista Grassi, who also described, in humans and mosquitoes, the developmental cycle of the three species of malarial parasites present in Italy’ . Grassi ...

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  8. Dec 31, 2005 · Battista Grassi: a zoologist for malaria* ... was an important discovery at the turn of the 19th century for which Sir Ronald Ross received the Nobel Prize in 1902. Battista Grassi, an Italian ...

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