Summary:
Landmark works of the 17th
century concerning observations of blood cells are quoted in the
article.
„Simple“ and successively „compound“ microscopes made their appearance in the late 16th
century and early 17th
century. In 1656, Frenchman Pierre Borel, physician-in-ordinary to the King
Louis XIV, who first applied the microscope to medicine described a type of „worm“ found in
human blood. In 1657, Athanasius Kircher, a Jesuit priest and scientist from Germany, examined
blood from plague victims, and described „worms“ of plague. In 1661, 1664 and 1665, the blood
cells were discerned by Marcello Malpighi. In 1678, the red blood corpuscles was described by Jan
Swammerdam of Amsterdam, a Dutch naturalist and physician. The first complete account of the
red cells was made by Anthony van Leeuwenhoek of Delft in the last quarter of the
17th
century.
Key words:
Blood cells - Discovery - History
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