- Thomas Spencer Cobbold
Thomas Spencer Cobbold (
1828 -March 10 ,1886 ), English man of science, was born atIpswich , a son of the Rev.Richard Cobbold (1797-1877), the author of the "History of Margaret Catchpole".After graduating in medicine at Edinburgh in 1851, he was appointed lecturer on botany at St Mary's hospital, London, in 1857, and also on
zoology andcomparative anatomy at Middlesex hospital in 1861.From 1868 he acted as Swiney lecturer on geology at the
British Museum until 1873, when he became professor of botany at theRoyal Veterinary College , afterwards filling a chair ofhelminthology which was specially created for him at that institution. He died in London on the 10th of March 1886.His special subject was helminthology, particularly the worms parasitic in man and animals, and as a physician he gained a considerable reputation in the diagnosis of cases depending on the presence of such organisms.
His numerous writings include "Entozoa" (1864); "Tapeworms" (1866); "Parasites" (1879); "Human Parasites" (1882); and "Parasites of Meat and Prepared Flesh Food" (1884).----
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