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Claude Bourgelat (27 March 1712 – 3 January 1779) was a French veterinary surgeon. He was a founder of scientifically informed veterinary medicine , and he created the world's first two veterinary schools for professional training.
Collection of works of numerous authors, such as Xenophon and Claude Bourgelat, translated into English: Augustin Mottin de la Balme • Essais sur l'équitation : ou, Principes raisonnés sur l'art de monter et de dresser les chevaux, 1773 Full text: 1773 edition: French: Johann Gottfried Prizelius
The campus of the school in Marcy-l'Étoile, Lyon. The National Veterinary School of Lyon (French: École nationale vétérinaire de Lyon or ENVL) is a French public institution of scientific research and higher education in veterinary medicine, located in Lyon.
The school was established in 1765 by Claude Bourgelat and moved to its current location in 1766. The school received immediate international recognition throughout the eighteenth century, and was especially famous for its collection of anatomical and natural history specimens. [1]
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According to Eugène Gayot, Claude Bourgelat and Louis-Furcy Grognier confused the Carrossier noir du Cotentin with the Merlerault, as the coat color and the breeding cradle did not match. [10] Stud farms have existed in the Cotentin since the 11th century. [11]
He thus met Claude Bourgelat (1712–1779), who set up a veterinary school in Lyon, where Rozier became professor of botany and materia medica in 1761 and set up a major botanical garden. In 1765 he became the institution's teaching director but Bourgelat – who had become the director of the school in Alfort – was offended by Rozier's ...
August 4 – Claude Bourgelat founds the first veterinary school, in Lyon; courses begin in 1762. Technology. Opening of Matthew Boulton's Soho Manufactory in England.