Name Ioan Cantacuzino Children Ion Filotti Cantacuzino | Spouse Maria Filotti Role Physician | |
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Grandchildren Serban Cantacuzino, Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino People also search for Ion Filotti Cantacuzino, Maria Filotti, Serban Cantacuzino, Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino, Elena Warthiadi |
Jurnal de secol ioan cantacuzino
Ioan C. Cantacuzino ([iˈo̯an kantakuziˈno], also Ion Cantacuzino; 25 November 1863 – 14 January 1934) was a renowned Romanian physician and bacteriologist, a professor at the Romanian School of Medicine and Pharmacy and a member of the Romanian Academy. He established the fields of microbiology and experimental medicine in Romania, and founded the Ioan Cantacuzino Institute.
Contents
- Jurnal de secol ioan cantacuzino
- Zece inventatori romani ep 10 ioan cantacuzino by anca mihai remus great si thewampers
- Biography
- References

Zece inventatori romani ep 10 ioan cantacuzino by anca mihai remus great si thewampers
Biography

Born in Bucharest as a member of the Cantacuzino family, he graduated from the University of Paris' Faculty of Sciences and Faculty of Medicine, and worked at several hospitals in Paris, obtaining his doctorate in 1894. Later in the same year, he began his academic career as a deputy professor at the University of Iaşi, and returned to Paris after two years to serve on the staff of the Pasteur Institute, where he worked under the direction of Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov.

In 1901, Cantacuzino was assigned a teaching position in Bucharest, where he became a major influence on a generation of scientists. His discoveries were relevant in the treatment of cholera, epidemic typhus, tuberculosis, and scarlet fever. As a disciple of Mechnikov, he devoted part of his research to expanding on the latter's field of interest (phagocytes, the body's means of defence against pathogens, as well as the issue of immunity and invertebrates). He invented the notion of contact immunity.
During the Second Balkan War, Cantacuzino was appointed head of the staff combatting the cholera epidemic in the ranks of the Romanian Army stationed in Dobruja; he was assigned to the same position during the Romanian campaign in World War I, in the fight against typhus. He founded and led the scientific magazines Revista Ştiinţelor Medicale and Archives roumaines de pathologie expérimentale, and regularly contributed to the literary magazine Viața Românească (replacing Paul Bujor on the editorial board). A collaborator of Constantin Stere, he was noted as a Poporanist disciple of Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea.