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  1. Louis Pasteur ForMemRS ( / ˈluːi pæˈstɜːr /, French: [lwi pastœʁ]; 27 December 1822 – 28 September 1895) was a French chemist, pharmacist, and microbiologist renowned for his discoveries of the principles of vaccination, microbial fermentation, and pasteurization, the last of which was named after him.

  2. May 29, 2024 · Louis Pasteur (born December 27, 1822, Dole, France—died September 28, 1895, Saint-Cloud) was a French chemist and microbiologist who was one of the most important founders of medical microbiology. Pasteur’s contributions to science, technology, and medicine are nearly without precedent.

  3. Apr 2, 2014 · Who Was Louis Pasteur? Louis Pasteur discovered that microbes were responsible for souring alcohol and came up with the process of pasteurization, where bacteria are destroyed by heating...

  4. He developed the earliest vaccines against fowl cholera, anthrax, and rabies. Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) is revered by his successors in the life sciences as well as by the general public. In fact, his name provided the basis for a household word— pasteurized.

  5. May 29, 2024 · French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur experimenting on a chloroformed rabbit, coloured wood engraving, 1885. (more) In the early 1870s Pasteur had already acquired considerable renown and respect in France, and in 1873 he was elected as an associate member of the Académie de Médecine.

  6. Nov 18, 2022 · He invented microbiology and established the foundations for immunology. Louis Pasteur (seated) poses with, among others, children treated with his rabies vaccine. By early 1886, more than 300...

  7. Louis Pasteur was one of the first scientists to discover the role of microorganisms in disease and how sickness could be prevented by vaccines. At the time, it was widely believed that...

  8. Louis Pasteur, (born Dec. 27, 1822, Dole, France—died Sept. 28, 1895, Saint-Cloud, near Paris), French chemist and microbiologist. Early in his career, after studies at the École Normale Supérieure, he researched the effects of polarized light on chemical compounds.

  9. Louis Pasteur, a qualified chemist, was behind the most important scientific revolutions of the 19th century in the fields of biology, agriculture, medicine and hygiene. Beginning his research on crystallography, he soon embarked on a journey filled with discoveries which led him to develop the rabies vaccine.

  10. Before he died seven years later, Louis Pasteur would witness some of the major achievements of his "disciples" – from serum therapy to treat diphtheria to the discovery of the plague bacillus –, and the founding of the first Institut Pasteur outside France, in Saigon.

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