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  1. Theodor Schwann. Theodor Schwann (December 7, 1810 to January 11, 1882) Schwann was a German physiologist who made several major contributions to modern biology, the most famous of which is discovering that animals (like plants) are made up of cells. Using powerful microscopes, Schwann was able to see animal cells and to classify them into five ...

  2. Jun 2, 2021 · 1 Citation. Explore all metrics. Theodor Schwann (Fig. 1 ), the eminent founder of modern histology and the discoverer of the lemmocyte, was born on December 7, 1810 in Neuss, Germany, the fourth son of Elisabeth (née Rottels) and Leonard Schwann, the owner of a local bookstore. Theodor grew up in a large family—he had twelve siblings.

    • Michał K. Owecki
    • michal.owecki@wp.pl
    • 2021
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  4. Theodor Schwann was born on 7 December 1810 in Neuss, Palatinate, the son of a goldsmith and printer, and died on 11 January 1882 in Cologne. A Catholic, Schwann studied at the Jesuit Gymnasium in Cologne before entering the University of Bonn, where he received a baccalaureate in philosophy in 1831.

  5. Feb 18, 2024 · Theodor Schwann was born on 7 December 1810, at Neuss near Düsseldorf, as the fourth son of Elisabeth Rottels and her husband Leonard Schwann. His father was a goldsmith who later became a printer. He first went to the Jesuits College in Cologne, and then to Bonn in 1829 where he met the prominent physiologist Johannes Peter Muller.

  6. Schwann, THEODOR, German physiologist and founder of the theory of the cellular structure of animal organisms; b. at Neuss, December 7, 1810; d. at Cologne, January 11, 1882. He studied medicine at Bonn, where one of his teachers was the celebrated physiologist John Muller, and also at Wurzburg, and at Berlin where he obtained his degree in 1834.

  7. Theodor Schwann (1810-1882) Theodor Schwann was born in Neuss, Germany. He studied medicine in Berlin, and after graduation went on to do an assistantship in anatomy. In 1838, Schwann and Matthias Jakob Schleiden (1804-1881) developed the "cell theory." Schwann went on and published his monograph Microscopic Researches into Accordance in the ...

  8. Theodor Schwann (Fig. 1), the eminent founder of modern histology and the discoverer of the lemmocyte, was born on December 7, 1810 in Neuss, Germany, the fourth son of Elisabeth (née Rottels) and Leonard Schwann, the owner of a local bookstore. Theodor grew up in a large family—he had twelve siblings.

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