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  1. Francesco Redi (18 February 1626 – 1 March 1697) was an Italian physician, naturalist, biologist, and poet. He is referred to as the "founder of experimental biology ", [2] [3] and as the "father of modern parasitology ".

  2. Francesco Redi (born Feb. 18, 1626, Arezzo, Italy—died March 1, 1697, Pisa) was an Italian physician and poet who demonstrated that the presence of maggots in putrefying meat does not result from spontaneous generation but from eggs laid on the meat by flies.

  3. Francesco Redi's was an innovative scientist, physician, and poet. His scientific work resulted in a number of significant milestones: he showed that flies breed and lay eggs and do not, as was popularly believed, spontaneously generate; his microscopic examination of parasites marked the founding of modern parasitology; and in studying chemical.

  4. Sep 9, 2018 · Francesco Redi was an Italian naturalist, physician, and poet. Besides Galileo, he was one of the most important scientists who challenged Aristotle 's traditional study of science. Redi gained fame for his controlled experiments.

  5. Dec 25, 2022 · Francesco Redi, an Italian scientist was the first scientist to challenge the theory of spontaneous generation by demonstrating that living organisms did not actually originate from non-living things.

  6. www.encyclopedia.com › science-and-technology › zoology-biographiesFrancesco Redi | Encyclopedia.com

    May 21, 2018 · REDI, FRANCESCO (b. Arezzo, Italy, 18 February 1626; d. Pisa, Italy. 1 March 1697 or 1698)entomology, parasitology, toxicology.Redi was the son of Gregorio Redi, a renowned Florentine physician who also worked at the Medici court, and Cecilia de’ Ghinci.

  7. The 17th-century Italian physician Francesco Redi cast the first serious doubts on the theory of spontaneous generation. He demonstrated that maggots develop in rotting meat not spontaneously but rather from eggs laid on the meat by flies. Redi was born on Feb. 19, 1626, in Arezzo, Italy.

  8. Francesco Redi (1626-1697) was a scientist and writer of highest level. He spent his career Medicean Court, where he developed a profound literary and philological at knowledge, but specialising in the life sciences.

  9. From 1660 to 1697 Francesco Redi was physician to two Grand Dukes of Tuscany as well as a natural philosopher and poet at the Medici court.

  10. catalogue.museogalileo.it › biography › FrancescoRediMuseo Galileo - Francesco Redi

    Redi played a decisive role in identifying the etiology of scabies, studied by Giovan Cosimo Bonomo (1666-1696) and Giacinto Cestoni (1637-1718): he showed that the infection was caused by a microscopic mite laying eggs under its hosts' skin.

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