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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: VAN-VIR |
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VIRCHOW, RUDOLF (1821-1902) , German pathologist and politician, was born on the 13th of October 1821 at Schivelbein, in Pomerania, where his father was a small farmer and shopkeeper. As a boy he attended the Volksschule of his native village
doctor
rector three years later. In 1847 he began to act as Privaldozent in the university, and founded with Reinhardt the Archie fur pathologische Anatomic and Physiologie, which, after his collaborator's death in 1852, he carried on alone, and in 1848 he went as a member of a government commission to investigate an outbreak of typhus in upper Silesia. About the same time, having shown too open sympathy with the revolutionary or reforming tendencies of 1848, he was for political reasons obliged to leave Berlin and retire to the seclusion of Wurzburg, the medical school of which profited enormously by his la:.ours as professor of pathological anatomy, and secured a wide extension of its reputation. In 1856 he was recalled to Berlin as crdinary professor of pathological anatomy in the university, and as director of the Pathological Institute formed a centre for research whence has flowed a constant stream of original
Wide as were Virchow-'s studies, and successful as he was in all, yet the foremost place must be given to his achievements in pathological investigation. He may, in fact, be called the father of modern pathology
pathology
Cellular-pathologie, published at Berlin in 1858, he established what Lord Lister described as the " true and fertile doctrine that every morbid structure consists of cells which have been derived from pre-existing cells as a progeny." But in addition to bringing forward a fundamental and philosophical view of morbid processes, which probably contributed more than any other single cause to vindicate for pathology the place which he claimed for it among the biological sciences, Virchow made many important contributions to histology and morbid anatomy and to the study of particular diseases. The classification into epithelial organs, connective tissues, and the more specialized muscle and nerve, was largely due to him; and he proved the presence of neuroglia in the brain and spinal cord, discovered crystalline haematoidine, and made out the structure of the umbilical cord. Medical science further owes to him the classification of new growths on a natural histological basis, the elucidation of leucaemia, glioma and lardaceous tumours, and detailed investigations into many diseasestuberculosis, pyaemia, diphtheria, leprosy, typhus, &c. Among the books he published on pathological and medical subjects may be mentioned Vorlesungen uber Pathologie, the first volume of which was the Cellular-pathologie (1858), and the remaining three Die Krankhaften Geschwulste (186367); Hand-buck der speziellen Pathologie and Therapie (3 vols., 1854-62), in collaboration with other German surgeons; Gesammelte Abhandlungen zur wissenschaftlichen Medizin (1856); Vier Reden uber Leben and Kranksein (1862) ; Untersuchungen uber die Entwicklung des Schadelgrundes (1857); Lehre von den Trichinen (1865) ; Ueber den Hunger-typhus (1868) ; and Gesammelte Abhandlungen aus dem Gebiete der bifentlichen Medizin and der Seuchenlehre (1879). In England his pathological work won general recognition. The Royal Society awarded him the Copley medal in 1892, and selected him as Croonian lecturer in the following year, his subject being the position of pathology among the biological sciences; and in 1898 he delivered the second Huxley memorial lecture at Charing Cross Hospital. Another science which Virchow cultivated with conspicuous success was anthropology, which he did much to put on a sound critical basis. At the meeting of the Naturforscherversammlung at Innsbruck
Nubia
As a politician Virchow had an active career. In 1862 he was elected a member of the Prussian Lower House. Professing advanced Liberal and democratic views, he was a founder and leader of the Fortschrittspartei, and the expression Kullurkampf had, it is believed, its origin in one of his electoral manifestoes. For many years he was chairman of the finance committee, and in that capacity may be looked upon as a chief
attributable in great measure to his insistence on the necessity of sanitary reform, and it was his unceasing efforts that secured for its inhabitants the drainage system, the sewage farms and the good water-supply, the benefits of which are reflected in the decreased death-rate they now enjoy. In respect cf hospitals and the treatment of the sick his energy and know-ledge were of enormous advantage to his country, both in times of peace and of war, and the unrivalled accommodation for medical treatment possessed by Berlin is a standing
Of his writings on social and political questions may be mentioned Die Erziehung des Weibes (1865); Ueber die nationals Entwicklung and Bedeutung der Naturwissenschaften (1865); Die Aufgaben der Naturwissenschaften in dem neuen national en Leben Deutschlends (1871); Die Freiheit der LVissenschaft im modernen Staat (1877), in which he opposed the idea of Haeckelthat the principles of evolution should be taught in elementary schoolson the ground that they were not as yet proved, and that it was mischievous to teach a hypothesis which still remained in the speculative stage. See Lives by Becher (Berlin, 1894) and Pagel ( Leipzig
Leipzig
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