- François-Vincent Raspail
François-Vincent Raspail (
January 25 1794 -January 7 1878 ) was a Frenchchemist ,physiologist , andsocialist .Biography
Raspail was born in
Carpentras ,Vaucluse . A member of the republicanCarbonari society, Raspail was imprisoned during Louis Philippe's reign (1830-1848) and was a candidate for presidency of the Second Republic in December 1848. However, he was then involved in the attempted revolt ofMay 15 ,1848 , and in March 1849 was again imprisoned as a result. After Louis Napoleon'sDecember 2 ,1851 coup, his sentence was commuted to exile, from which he returned to France only in 1862. In 1869, during the liberal phase of the Second Empire (1851-1870), he was elected deputy fromLyon . He remained a popular republican during theFrench Third Republic , after the short-termParis Commune in 1871.His sons, Benjamin (eldest), François, Xavier (youngest) and Émile, were also all notable figures in the Third Republic.
cientific achievements
Raspail was one of the founders of the
cell theory inbiology . He coined the phrase "omnis cellula e cellula" ("every cell is derived from a [preexisting] cell") later attributed to Rudolf Karl Virchow. He was an early proponent of the use of themicroscope in the study of plants. He was also an early advocate of the use ofantisepsis and better sanitation and diet.Entry into politics
After the revolution of 1830, Raspail became involved in politics. He was President of the Human Rights Society, and was imprisoned for that role. While in prison, he tended sick inmates, and studied their diseases. He became convinced of the value of
camphor , which he believed worked by killing extremely small parasites -- a version of thegerm theory of disease .Later career
Raspail was a candidate for the Presidency of the
French Second Republic in December 1848, but came in fourth, losing to Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte (Later Napoleon III). He had been involved in the attempted revolt of15 May 1848 , and in March 1849 was again imprisoned as a result. In 1853, Napoleon III commuted his sentence of imprisonment to one of exile. He returned to France from exile in 1862. In 1869 he was elected deputy from Lyon and in 1875 from Marseille. He remained popular and respected during theFrench Third Republic . The longest boulevard in Paris, in the VIIe, VIe andXIVe arrondissement s, was named in his honor.Publications
*"Essai de chimie microscopique" 1830
*"Nouveau système de chimie organique" 1833
*"Manuel annuaire de la santé" 1834, revisued annually
*"Lettres sur les Prisons du Paris" 1839
*"Histoire naturelle de la santé" 1843
*" Le Réformateur" (newspaper, published 1834-35)For further reading
*"Raspail: Scientist and Reformer" by Dora B. Weiner (Columbia University Press, 1968)
External links
* [http://www.cats.ohiou.edu/~Chastain/rz/raspail.htm François Vincent Raspail in the "Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions"]
* [http://www.polybiblio.com/gerits/3462.html Bibliopoly listing by A Gerits & Son]
* [http://godel.ph.utexas.edu/~tonyr/galois.html "Genius and Biographers: The Fictionalization of Evariste Galois"] (Mentions and quotes Raspail several times)
* [http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/912.html Who named it -- Virchow's law]
* [http://www.edu.pe.ca/vrcs/2003/courses/9science/timeline.htm Timeline for the Cell Theory]
* [http://www.archontology.org/nations/france/france_state2/napoleon3a.php archontology.org's page on Napoléon III] , gives election results for 1848
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