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Marc Mammerickx: Claude Bourgelat: avocat des vétérinaires, Bruxelles 1971; Hugues Plaideux, « L'inventaire après décès de Claude Bourgelat », in Bulletin de la Société française d'histoire de la médecine et des sciences vétérinaires, 10, 2010, p. 125-158.on line
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 ]
This is a list of notable French scientists. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. A José Achache (20th-21st centuries), geophysicist and ecologist Jean le Rond d'Alembert (1717–1783), mathematician, mechanician, physicist and philosopher Claude Allègre (born 1937 ...
Review d'histoire des sciences et de leurs applications. 15: 153. Jonathan Simon, "Honoré Fragonard, anatomical virtuoso", in Science and Spectacle in the European Enlightenment, edited by Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent and Christine Blondel, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2008. Marc Mammerickx, Claude Bourgelat, avocat des vétérinaires, 1971.
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. It is operated under the supervision of the ministry of Agriculture. It is a division of VetAgro Sup.
Charles Vial de Sainbel or Saint Bel (1753–1793) was a French veterinary surgeon who settled in the Kingdom of Great Britain. He was born at Lyons; studied under Claude Bourgelat; became assistant-surgeon and public demonstrator at the veterinary college at Lyons in 1773; distinguished himself during an epizootic among horses in France in ...
A photo taken in 1909 in Fort Sumner, N.M., shows Deluvina Maxwell, center, a Dine’ (Navajo) woman enslaved in the household of prominent landowners Lucien and Maria de la Luz Beaubien Maxwell ...
The Philosophers' Meal [] by Jean Huber, 1772, depicts several of the Encyclopédistes, including Condorcet, d'Alembert, Diderot, and Voltaire.. The Encyclopédistes (French: [ɑ̃siklɔpedist]) (also known in British English as Encyclopaedists, [1] or in U.S. English as Encyclopedists) were members of the Société des gens de lettres, a French writers' society, who contributed to the ...