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Kristine Bonnevie

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Nationality
  
Norway

Parents
  
Jacob Aall Bonnevie

Doctoral students
  
Fields
  
Cell biology

Name
  
Kristine Bonnevie

Grandparents
  
Honoratus Bonnevie

Role
  
Researcher


Kristine Bonnevie Portrett av Kristine Bonnevie Flickr Photo Sharing

Born
  
8 October 1872Trondhjem (
1872-10-08
)

Known for
  
First female member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters

Influences
  
Theodor BoveriArnold Lang

Died
  
August 30, 1948, Oslo, Norway

Influenced by
  
Similar People
  

Kristine bonnevie dokumentar


Kristine Elisabeth Heuch Bonnevie (8 October 1872 – 30 August 1948) was a Norwegian biologist and Norway's first female professor. Her fields of research were cytology, genetics and embryology.

Contents

Kristine Bonnevie httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Forskningsfartøyet "Dr. Fridtjof Nansen" ble "Kristine Bonnevie"


Personal life

Kristine Bonnevie Oslo The Kristine Bonnevie Lecture on Evolutionary

She was the fifth of seven children to Jacob Aall Bonnevie (1838–1904) and Anne Johanne Daae (1839–1876). Jacob Aall Bonnevie had his eighth and ninth children with his second wife Susanne Bryn (1848-1927). Her family moved from Trondhjem to Kristiania in 1886.

Kristine Bonnevie Kristine Bonnevie Wikipedia

Bonnevie never married. Her sister Honoria, the eldest child of Jacob and Anne, married Norwegian physicist and meteorologist Vilhelm Bjerknes.

Career

Kristine Bonnevie The Kristine Bonnevie lectures 2017 Meave Leakey and Alan Alda

Bonnevie took her examen artium in 1892, began studying zoology in 1892, later switching to biology. She completed her doctoral dissertation, "Undersøgelser over kimcellerne hos Enteroxenos østergreni" (studies on the germ cells of Enteroxenos østergreni) in 1906. She also studied under Arnold Lang in Zürich from 1898-99, under Theodor Boveri in Würzburg in 1900-01, and under Edmund Beecher Wilson at Columbia University in New York from 1906-07. She succeeded Johan Hjort as leader of the Zootomic laboratory in 1900. She was a professor at Royal Frederick University from 1912 to 1937, and founded the Institute of Inheritance Research in 1916.

In 1911, Bonnevie became the first female member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Later, she founded the Norwegian Association for Female Academics, leading it from 1922-1925. She established a study home for young girls in 1916 and a students' house in 1923. Bonnevie was a member of the University's broadcasting committee from 1927 to 1937. Thor Heyerdahl was one of her students in the 1930s.

Bonnevie was a central board member of the Liberal Left Party from 1909 to 1918. She was elected as a member of Kristiania city council, serving from 1908 to 1919, and as a deputy representative to the Parliament of Norway in 1915. She served the term 1916–1918 as the deputy of Otto Bahr Halvorsen in the constituency Gamle Aker.

Bonnevie received the King's Medal of Merit in gold in 1920, the Order of St. Olav, 1st class, in 1946, and "Fridtjof Nansen's reward" in 1935. The biology building on Blindern at the University of Oslo is named Kristine Bonnevie's House.

References

Kristine Bonnevie Wikipedia


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