Thomas Grainger Stewart

Sir Thomas Grainger Stewart ( born September 23, 1837 in Edinburgh, † February 3, 1900 ) was a British pathologist.

After his studies in Edinburgh, he continued his studies in Vienna, Berlin and Prague, before he returned to Edinburgh, where he was first a royal court doctor. At the University of Edinburgh, he was Professor of Pathology. Stewart was until his death president of the Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society. He became known through publications such as Practical Treatise on Bright's Disease and Diseases of the Nervous System. Among other things, according to him and his colleague Gordon Morgan Holmes, the Stewart - Holmes syndrome named.

On January 2, 1866, he was inducted into the Royal Society of Edinburgh. For his work as a court physician of Queen Victoria, he was awarded the title of Sir.

Swell

  • Pathologist
  • Physician (19th century)
  • University teachers ( Edinburgh)
  • Knight Bachelor
  • Scotsman
  • Briton
  • Born in 1837
  • Died 1900
  • Man
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