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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.
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]
The school was established in 1761 by Claude Bourgelat and was the world's first veterinary school. This is one of the four schools providing veterinary education in France. See detailed article Veterinary education in France
Claude Bourgelat is considered the founder of scientific veterinary medicine in France and around the world. [1] By his willingness to provide instruction to blacksmiths , who were until then the only people to treat diseases of domestic animals, he was at the origin of the training of veterinarians in France.
He also studied under the great Claude Bourgelat, the father of veterinary science. He was appointed in 1772 lecturer and demonstrator to a class of sixteen pupils, and in 1773 he was made upper student, assistant-surgeon, and one of the public demonstrators, a post of great importance on account of the extensive practice which it involved and ...
It was Claude Bourgelat, the founder of the first veterinary college in Lyon France in 1761, who, prior to the existence of the veterinary profession, coined the term “comparative pathobiology”. [3] When the Royal Veterinary College was established in London in 1790 many students from France moved to England.
These colleges had a long history as separate institutions. The Veterinary Institution in Skara was founded in 1775 and was headed by Peter Hernqvist, a student of both Carl von Linné and of Claude Bourgelat, who founded the first veterinary college in Lyon in 1762. From 1821 a new veterinary institution in Stockholm took over the training of ...
Marie-Claude Bomsel (born 1946) — wildlife expert Alfred Boquet (1879–1947) — French veterinarian, known for his work at the Pasteur Institute in Paris Claude Bourgelat (1712–1779) — founder of 18th-century French veterinary school