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| About Visionlearning |
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| Happy Birthday Mr. Schleiden! |
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The botanist Matthias Jakob Schleiden was born in Hamburg, Germany on April 5th 1804. Schleiden studied law at Heidelberg and practiced as a legal advocate in Hamburg, Germany until 1831. Having had little success in this career, he began studying botany and medicine at Gottingen and Berlin, and in 1839 graduated from Jena, where he was appointed extraordinary professor of botany from 1839-1862. In 1863, Schleiden was called to Dorpat, Estonia, but resigned the following year and returned to Germany, where he lived as a private teacher. As a professor at Jena and Dorpat, Schleiden began investigating of the nature of plants, working under Johannes Müller. Unlike his contemporaries who simply classified plants according to their physical characteristics, Schleiden studied them with a microscope. As a result, Schleiden was the first person to recognize the importance of cells in plants, first discovered by Robert Hooke in 1655. Schleiden observed that all plants seemed to be composed of cells, and he proposed that these cells were the most basic unit of life in the plants. He proposed that plant growth took place by the generation of new cells, which, he argued, would propagate or ‘crystallize’ from buds on the nucleus of old cells. Although later work would show his proposal regarding the budding of the cell nucleus
Schleiden wrote a number of books and papers over the course of his life including Introduction to Scientific Botany (1842-1843), Manual of Botany Doctor-Pharmaceutics (1852-1857) and The Plants and their Life (1864). On June 23, 1881, Matthias Schleiden died at Frankfort-on-Main. If you would like to read more about Matthias Jakob Schleiden or cells, visit our Cells: Discovery and Basic Structure. If you have a recommendation for a special event in science that you would like us to celebrate, please submit your suggestion through our comment system. |
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