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G. Alan Garber; Josef Gerstmann; Edgar von Gierke; Yevsey Gindes; Oskar David Ginsberger; Shimon Glick; Simone Gold; Elkhonon Goldberg; Brian Goldman; Hans Goldmann
This is a list of notable Jewish American biologists and physicians. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans. David Baltimore, reverse transcriptase, Nobel Prize (1975) [1] Baruj Benacerraf, immunologist, Nobel Prize (1980) [2] Baruch Blumberg, hepatitis B virus, Nobel Prize (1976) [3] Gerty Cori, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1947 ...
Richard J. Schmidt – American physician who contaminated his girlfriend with AIDS-tainted blood; Harold Shipman (1946–2004) – British serial killer; Michael Swango (born 1953) – American serial killer; An A-Z list of Wikipedia articles of Nazi doctors
His father was the Polish rabbi and physician Moses Kohn of Narol, in the district of Bielsk, who moved to Metz in 1648 to escape persecution during the Chmielnicki Uprising and became rabbi there. After his father's death, Phega, Cohn's mother, married Moses Samson Bacharach , rabbi of Worms , and Cohen become the step brother of the famous ...
Jewish medical practitioners were often educated in Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Hebrew, which gave them access to medical texts that were often inaccessible to their Christian counterparts. [9] Working as physicians, surgeons, and midwives, Jewish women were accepted as medical authorities in Paris, Florence, Naples, and Sicily, among other cities.
Da'ud Abu al-Fadl (1161–1242) was a Karaite Jewish physician who lived in Ayyubid Egypt in the twelfth century CE. He was born in Cairo in 1161 and died there about 1242. . Having studied medicine under the Jewish physician Hibat Allah ibn Jami, and under Abu al-Fafa'il ibn Naqid, he became the court physician of the sultan al-Malik al-'Adil Abu Bakr ibn Ayyub, the brother and successor of Sa
Lejb Wulman c. 1929. Lejb (Leon) Wulman (September 13, 1887, Berdychiv – April 28, 1971, New York City) was a Polish-Jewish and American physician and social activist, the co-author (with Joseph Tenenbaum) of a monograph on the Polish-Jewish physicians murdered in the Holocaust (The Martyrdom of Jewish physicians in Poland).
Ibn Jumayʿ was born to a Jewish family in Fustat, Egypt.He studied with the physician Ibn al-ʿAynzarbī (died 1153/AH 548) and entered the service of Saladin. [2] [3] According to Ibn Abi Usaibia's Lives of the Physicians, Ibn Jumayʿ wrote eight works on medical-related subjects.