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XRH1733972 Edward Jenner (17 May 1749 – 26 January 1823) was a British physician and scientist who pioneered the concept of vaccines including creating the smallpox vaccine, the world's first vaccine.
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XEE5029862 Portrait of Edward Jenner (1749-1823) English physician
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LLM979428 Edward Jenner (1749-1823), English physician and scientist. Illustration for London edited by Charles Knight (Virtue, c 1875). Digitally cleaned image.
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UIS5081254 Edward Jenner, British physician, c 1800. Lithograph by Leon Noel, based on Vignero's version of a drawing by J R Smith. Jenner (1749-1823), an English doctor and pupil of John Hunter, introduced fluid from a cowpox sore through a person's skin, in order to protect them against smallpox, a similar but more dangerous disease. He called his method 'vaccination' from 'vacca', the Latin word for cow. , published as 'Inquiry into the Cause and Effects of Variolae Vaccinae [cow-pox]' in 1798, although he did not understand why the method worked, his scientific investigations showed that using fluid from a human with cowpox was safer than variolation inoculating non-infected people with fluid from pustules of smallpox. The 1853 Vaccination Act heralded an era of compulsory vaccination against smallpox. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5092566 Edward Jenner, British physician, c 1809. Engraving by W H Mote after a work by Sir Thomas Lawrence. Jenner (1749-1823), an English doctor and pupil of John Hunter, introduced fluid from a cowpox sore through a person's skin, in order to inoculate them against smallpox, a similar but more dangerous disease. He called his method 'vaccination' from 'vacca', the Latin word for cow. Although his discovery pre-dated any scientific explanation, his research, published as 'Inquiry into the Cause and Effects of Variolae Vaccinae [cow-pox]' in 1798, showed that using fluid from a human with cowpox was safer than variolation inoculating non-infected people with fluid from pustules of smallpox. The 1853 Vaccination Act heralded an era of compulsory vaccination against smallpox. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5093245 Edward Jenner, British physician, c 1820. Stipple engraving, 'The Discoverer of Cow Pock Inoculation', published by J Robins & Co, Ivy Lane, London in 1823. Jenner (1749-1823), an English doctor and pupil of John Hunter, introduced fluid from a cowpox sore through a person's skin, in order to inoculate them against smallpox, a similar but more dangerous disease. He called his method 'vaccination' from 'vacca', the Latin word for cow. Although his discovery pre-dated any scientific explanation, his research, published as 'Inquiry into the Cause and Effects of Variolae Vaccinae [cow-pox]' in 1798, showed that using fluid from a human with cowpox was safer than variolation inoculating non-infected people with fluid from pustules of smallpox. The 1853 Vaccination Act heralded an era of compulsory vaccination against smallpox. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5081234 Edward Jenner, British physician, c 1809. Lithograph by J H Lynch, after a painting by Sir Thomas Lawrence. Jenner (1749-1823), an English doctor and pupil of John Hunter, introduced fluid from a cowpox sore through a person's skin, in order to inoculate them against smallpox, a similar but more dangerous disease. He called his method 'vaccination' from 'vacca', the Latin word for cow. Although his discovery pre-dated any scientific explanation, his research, published as 'Inquiry into the Cause and Effects of Variolae Vaccinae [cow-pox]' in 1798, showed that using fluid from a human with cowpox was safer than variolation inoculating non-infected people with fluid from pustules of smallpox. The 1853 Vaccination Act heralded an era of compulsory vaccination against smallpox. Published by C H Thomas, Gloucester. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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LLE820652 John Baron (1786-1851), English physician and biographer of Edward Jenner.
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LLM974205 Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) and Edward Jenner (1749-1823). Educational card, late 19th or early 20th century.
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LLM972172 Edward Jenner (1749-1823), English doctor and scientist who discovered a vaccine against smallpox. Chocolat Carpentier educational card.
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LLM972160 Edward Jenner (1749-1823), English doctor and scientist who discovered a vaccine against smallpox. Chocolat Guerin-Boutron educational card, from a series on benefactors of humanity.
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LLM2819130 Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccine. Inventions illustres. Jenner et la vaccine. Illustration for Le Petit Journal, 13 January 1901.
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TAD1753012 Edward Jenner (1749-1823) english physician who discovered the vaccination against smallpox in 1796, engraving
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LIP11727547 Statue of Edward Jenner to be erected in Trafalgar Square, London. The statue now stands in Kensington Gardens. Illustration from The Illustrated News of the World, 27 March 1858.By English School (19th Century)
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XEE4404520 Discover the immunity against smallpox
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LLM1094030 Edward Jenner (1749-1823), English doctor and scientist who discovered a vaccine against smallpox. French educational card, late 19th or early 20th century.
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LLM972185 Edward Jenner (1749-1823), English doctor and scientist who discovered a vaccine against smallpox. Educational card.
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Total de Resultados: 22

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