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Ambroise and Paré
French surgeon Ambroise Paré ( c. 1510 – 1590 ) is considered as one of the fathers of surgery ; he was leader in surgical techniques and battlefield medicine, especially the treatment of wounds.
* December 20 – Ambroise Paré, French surgeon ( b. 1510 )
** Ambroise Paré, French surgeon ( d. 1590 )
Ambroise Paré ( ca.
Ligatures, or material used to tie off severed blood vessels, originated as early as ancient Rome, and were improved by Ambroise Paré in the 16th century.
Ambroise Paré, a French army surgeon, systematically studied the effects of violent death on internal organs.
Simpson's system of taxonomy, however, was far from the first ; taxonomies / descriptions for the classification of intersexuality were developed by Italian physician and physicist Fortuné Affaitati in 1549, French surgeon Ambroise Paré in 1573, French physician and sexology pioneer Nicolas Venette in 1687 ( under the pseudonym Vénitien Salocini ), and French Zoologist Isidore Geoffroy St. Hilaire in 1832.
* Clinique Ambroise Paré
* 1510-1590 Ambroise Paré surgeon
Ambroise Paré considered performing a trepanning.
Improvement in amputation surgery and prosthetic design came at the hands of Ambroise Paré.
Henry suffered a mortal head wound from a lance fragment and, despite the efforts of royal surgeon Ambroise Paré, he died on 10 July 1559 from septicaemia and was buried in a cadaver tomb in Saint Denis Basilica.
* In 1572, Ambroise Paré wrote an account of a man suffering from " the most frightful satyriasis " after taking a potion composed of nettles and cantharides.
Even with the articulated joints invented by Ambroise Paré in the 1500s, the amputee could not flex at will.
This system was devised by the French barber-surgeon Ambroise Paré and remains in use today.
Ambroise Paré ( 1510 – 1590 ) described suture of tracheal lacerations in the mid-16th century.
This method of hemostasis was largely forgotten until it was rediscovered by the French barber-surgeon Ambroise Paré in the 16th century.
The technique of ligature of the arteries as an alternative to cauterization was later improved and used more effectively by Ambroise Paré.
His father practised at the Paris bar, and his mother was a daughter of the great surgeon Ambroise Paré.
Al-Tasrif described how to ligature blood vessels almost 600 years before Ambroise Paré, and was the first recorded book to document several dental devices and explain the hereditary nature of haemophilia.
* French military surgeon Ambroise Paré ( 1510 – 90 ) pioneered modern battlefield wound treatment.
The 16th century physician Ambroise Paré used the term commotio cerebri, as well as " shaking of the brain ", " commotion ", and " concussion ".
*: Ambroise Paré
* Publication begins in Paris of the Œuvres complètes d ’ Ambroise Paré edited by Joseph-François Malgaigne.

Ambroise and sometimes
They were formerly sometimes regarded as the first-hand narrative on which Ambroise based his work, but that can no longer be maintained.

Ambroise and spelled
During it, the Wizard relates yet another account of his history in Oz, telling Ozma that his birth name was Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkle Emmanuel Ambroise Diggs, which, being a very long and cumbersome name, and as his other initials spelled out " PINHEAD ," he preferred to leave just as O. Z.

Ambroise and Ambrose
Autpert Ambrose ( Ambroise ) () ( ca.

Ambroise and ")
Some attempts to use the character in other superhero or family-friendly comics were altered due to editorial mandate, such as " Gregori Eilovotich Rasputin " in Firestorm and Captain Atom ( who refers to Constantine as " an impertinent bumbler in England ") and " Ambroise Bierce " in Stanley and His Monster.

Ambroise and wounds
Ambroise Paré, the chief surgeon to King Charles IX and King Henry III, observed that maggots often infested open wounds.

Ambroise and first
Matisse's first solo exhibition was at Ambroise Vollard's gallery in 1904, without much success.
He studied first under Louis Fanart ( the choirmaster at Reims cathedral ) and later at the Paris Conservatoire under Ambroise Thomas.
Her period in Vienna closed on August 10, 1873 in a farewell performance, in which she played Ophelia in the very first performance of Ambroise Thomas ' Hamlet at the Vienna Court Opera.
The first triplane known to have flown was the Goupy No. 1, designed in 1908 by Ambroise Goupy, built by Voisin, and flown with a 37 kW ( 50 hp ) Renault engine.
In 1910, at the age of 14, Pelletier had his first exposure to opera, a performance of Ambroise Thomas's Mignon at His Majesty's Theatre, Montreal.
Title page of Ambroise Tardieu's 1872 book in which excerpts of Herculine Barbin's memoirs were first published.
However, in 1551, French military surgeon Ambroise Paré recorded the first documentation of phantom limb pain when he reported that, " For the patients, long after the amputation is made, say that they still feel pain in the amputated part " ( Bittar et al., 2005 ).
In 1922, the first group of Belgian missionary sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary ( Immaculati Cordis Mariae ) arrived headed by Mother Marie Andrea and followed by Mother Marie Ambroise in 1923.
He was the first to re-emphasize ligature of the two ends of arteries in hemorrhages first promoted by Ambroise Paré in the mid-16th century.

Ambroise and modern
The principle of ligation is attributed to Galen, later rediscovered some 1, 500 years later by Ambroise Paré and finally it found its modern use in 1870 – 80, made popular by Jules-Émile Péan.

Ambroise and were
In addition to seeing Gauguin's work at Durrio's Picasso also saw the work at Ambroise Vollard's gallery where both he and Gauguin were represented.
A jury of French composers and playwrights including Daniel Auber, Fromental Halévy, Ambroise Thomas, Charles Gounod and Eugène Scribe considered 78 entries ; the five short-listed entrants were all asked to set a libretto, Le docteur miracle, written by Ludovic Halévy and Léon Battu.
Maga's colleagues in the cabinet were Pascal Chabi Kao, minister of finance ; Albert Ouassa, minister of health ; and Chabi Mama, minister of rural development ; while Apithy friends were Ambroise Agboton, minister of labor ; Joseph Keke, minister of economy and planning ; and Michel Toko, minister of justice and guardian of the seals.
In the sixteenth century the French surgeon Ambroise Paré introduced the lancing of gums using a lancet, in the belief that teeth were failing to emerge from the gums due to lack of a pathway, and that this failure was a cause of death.
At the party's Fifth Extraordinary Congress in December 2006, Sassou-Nguesso was re-elected as President of the Central Committee of the PCT and Ambroise Noumazalaye was re-elected as Secretary-General of the PCT ; the Central Committee elected at the 2006 congress included more than 500 members ( there were previously less than 150 members ), while the Political Bureau elected on the same occasion included more than 60 members and the Permanent Secretariat included 15 members.
Maga's colleagues in the cabinet were Pascal Chabi Kao, minister of finance ; Albert Ouassa, minister of health ; and Chabi Mama, minister of rural development ; while Apithy friends were Ambroise Agboton, minister of labor ; Joseph Keke, minister of economy and planning ; and Michel Toko, minister of justice and guardian of the seals.
His teachers were Antoine Marmontel for piano, Ambroise Thomas for composition and François Benoist for organ.
The works Picasso painted for his show at Ambroise Vollard's gallery that summer were generally characterized by a " dazzling palette and exuberant subject matter ".
Various typographic points were defined, including the Truchet point by Sébastien Truchet ( 1657 – 1729 ), the Fournier point by Pierre Simon Fournier in 1737 and the Didot point by the Didot brothers, Francois Ambroise and Pierre Francois, in 1755 or 1767 or 1783, which was exactly two Truchet points.

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