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・ Ferdinand III of Castile
・ Ferdinand III of Limburg Stirum
・ Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany
・ Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor
・ Ferdinand IV
・ Ferdinand IV of Castile
・ Ferdinand IV of Limburg Stirum
・ Ferdinand IV, Grand Duke of Tuscany
・ Ferdinand IV, King of the Romans
・ Ferdinand Christian Baur
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・ Ferdinand Cohen-Blind
Ferdinand Cohn
・ Ferdinand Collmann
・ Ferdinand Columbus
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・ Ferdinand D. Bluford
・ Ferdinand Dalberg-Acton
・ Ferdinand Damanik
・ Ferdinand Daučík
・ Ferdinand David
・ Ferdinand David (musician)
・ Ferdinand David (politician)
・ Ferdinand de Baillet-Latour
・ Ferdinand de Boisschot
・ Ferdinand de Braekeleer


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Ferdinand Cohn : ウィキペディア英語版
Ferdinand Cohn

Ferdinand Julius Cohn (24 January 1828 – 25 June 1898) was a German biologist. He is one of the founders of modern bacteriology and microbiology.
Ferdinand J. Cohn was born in the Jewish quarter of Breslau in the Prussian Province of Silesia (which is now Wroclaw, Poland).〔Chung, King-Thom. (Ferdinand Julius Cohn (1828-1898): Pioneer of Bacteriology ). Department of Microbiology and Molecular Cell Sciences, The University of Memphis.〕 His father, Issak Cohn, was a successful merchant and manufacturer. At the age of 10 Ferdinand suffered hearing impairment (for an unknown reason). Starting at age 16 he studied botany under Heinrich Goppert at the University of Breslau. Due to Cohn's Jewish background he was prevented from taking the final degree examinations at Breslau.〔(Ferdinand Cohn Facts ). Biography.yourdictionary.com (2014-06-20). Retrieved on 2014-06-29.〕〔〔 He then moved to the University of Berlin. At age 19 in 1847 he received a degree in botany at Berlin. He remained studying botany for another couple of years in Berlin, where he came in contact with many of the top scientists of his time.
In 1849 he returned to the University of Breslau and he remained at that university for the rest of his career as a teacher and researcher. On his initial return to Breslau in his early twenties, his father had bought for him a large and expensive microscope made by Simon Plössl. This microscope, which the University of Breslau and most universities did not have, was Ferdinand Cohn's main research tool in the 1850s. In the 1850s he studied the growth and division of plant cells. In 1855 he produced papers on the sexuality of ''Sphaeroplea annulina'' and later ''Volvox globator''. In the 1860s he studied plant physiology in several different aspects. From 1870 onward he mostly studied bacteria. He published over 150 research reports during his lifetime. The University of Breslau became an innovative center for plant physiology and microbiology while he was there.
Cohn was the first to classify algae as plants, and to define what distinguishes them from green plants. His classification of bacteria into four groups based on shape (sphericals, short rods, threads, and spirals) is still in use today. Among other things Cohn is remembered for being the first to show that ''Bacillus'' can change from a vegetative state to an endospore state when subjected to an environment deleterious to the vegetative state.
In 1885 he received the Leeuwenhoek Medal.
==References==
==External Links==

* (Jewish Encyclopedia entry for Ferdinand Julius Cohn )
* (Ferdinand Cohn ) in the ''Encyclopedia of World Biography'', published by Gale Group (2010).



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