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24/06/2003 11:57


Camillo Golgi  Corteno (BS) 1844 - Pavia 1926

Biologo e medico, docente all'Università di Pavia. Dopo aver lavorato all'Ospedale per Malati Cronici di Abbiategrasso, tornò all'Università di Pavia, dove condusse ricerche sulla malaria (individuando i tre parassiti ed i tre tipi di febbre) e sulla struttura cellulare (apparato di Golgi). La sua scoperta più importante è la reazione nera, metodo per la colorazione di singoli nervi e strutture cellulari, fondamentale per poter osservare i processi nervosi. Ricevette il Nobel nel 1906, condiviso con Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Visse sempre a Pavia, con la moglie Lina (nipote di Bizzozero), e durante la prima guerra mondiale fu il responsabile dell'Ospedale Militare di Pavia, creando un centro per il trattamento e la riabilitazione delle lesioni al sistema nervoso periferico.

Se siete interessati ad una biografia completa della vita e delle opere di Camillo Golgi siete invitati a visitare il sito www.intercam.it navigando i link qui sotto riportati:


Corteno
I natali
La fanciullezza
Gli studi primari e secondari
Studente universitario
I Professori del Golgi
La laurea precoce
Medico tirocinante
L'amico Bizzozero
Fama di Istologo
Primario ad Abbiategrasso
Una grande scoperta: la Reazione Nera
Le Cellule del I° e II° tipo di Golgi
Pubblicazioni del Golgi
Professore Universitario
Il Matrimonio
La Rete Nervosa Diffusa
I corpi o corpuscoli di Golgi
Il Laboratorio di Golgi
La scuola golgiana
Allievi noti del Golgi
I contributi sulla Malaria: Il ciclo e la legge di Golgi
L'amicizia con Koelliker

Santiago Ramon y Caial
Il difficile rapporto Golgi-Cajal
L'Apparato di Golgi
Golgi uomo pubblico
Rettore Magnifico
Senatore del Regno Italico
Il giubileo professorale e nuziale e l'OPERA OMNIA
Il Premio Nobel
Premi nobel Italiani
Le vacanze scolastiche estivo autunnali di
Golgi
Golgi e la Grande Guerra
Le nuove Università milanesi
Malattia, morte, commemorazioni
Golgi uomo
Golgi filantropo
Golgi scienziato
Golgi politico e filosofo
Cariche, premi e onorificienze del Golgi
Aforismi golgiani
Associazioni e Istituti golgiani
Cimeli golgiani
La variazione del nome del Comune di Corteno
Il nascente museo nella casa natale a Corteno Golgi
Discorsi di Golgi




Camillo Golgi was born at Corteno near Brescia on July 7, 1843, the son of a physician. He studied medicine at the University of Pavia under Mantegazza, Bizzozero and Oehl. After graduating in 1865 he continued to work in Pavia at the Hospital of St. Matteo. Golgi himself stated that Bizzozero greatly influenced him and his methods of scientific research; at that time most of his investigations were concerned with the nervous system, i.e. insanity, neurology and the lymphatics of the brain. In 1872 he accepted the post of Chief Medical Officer at the Hospital for the Chronically Sick at Abbiategrasso, and it is believed that in the seclusion of this hospital, in a little kitchen which he had converted into a laboratory, he first started his investigations into the nervous system.

Golgi returned to the University of Pavia as Extraordinary Professor of Histology, went to Siena for a short time, but returned to Pavia and was appointed to the Chair for General Pathology in 1881, in succession to his teacher Bizzozero. He settled down in Pavia for good, and married Donna Lina, a niece of Bizzozero.

Already while working at the Hospital of St. Matteo, Golgi became interested in the investigation of the causes of malaria and he must be credited for having determined the three forms of the parasite and the three types of fever. After prolonged studies he found a way of photographing the most characteristic phases in 1890.

Golgi was a famous teacher, his laboratory was open to anyone anxious to do research. He never actually practised medicine, but directed the Department of General Pathology at St.Matteo Hospital where young doctors were trained. He also founded and directed the Istituto Sieroterapico-Vaccinogeno of the Province of Pavia. Golgi was Rector of Pavia University for a long time and was also made a Senator of the Kingdom of Italy.

He was an old man during the First World War, but assumed the responsibility for a Military Hospital in Pavia, where he created a neuro-pathological and mechano-therapeutical centre for the study and treatment of peripheral nervous lesions and for the rehabilitation of the wounded.

However, the work of greatest importance which Golgi carried out was a revolutionary method of staining individual nerve and cell structures, which is referred to as the «black reaction». This method uses a weak solution of silver nitrate and is particularly valuable in tracing the processes and most delicate ramifications of cells. Golgi himself was extremely modest and reticent about his work and it is not known when exactly he made this invention. All through his life, however, he continued to work on these lines, modifying and improving this technique.

Golgi received the highest honours and awards in recognition of his work. He shared the Nobel Prize for 1906 with Santiago Ramón y Cajal for their work on the structure of the nervous system. The Historical Museum at the University of Pavia dedicated a hall to Golgi, where more than 80 certificates of honorary degrees, diplomas and awards are exhibited.

Golgi married Donna Lina Aletti, previously mentioned. They had no children of their own, but adopted his niece, now Mrs. Carolina Golgi-Papini in Rome. He died at Pavia, where he had lived all his life, on January 21, 1926.

From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam