Thomas Spencer Cobbold

19th-century English biologist

T. Spencer Cobbold
Born(1828-05-26)26 May 1828
Ipswich
Died20 March 1886(1886-03-20) (aged 57)
London
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
AwardsFellow of the Royal Society
Scientific career
FieldsZoology; anatomy
InstitutionsSt Mary's Hospital, London; Middlesex Hospital; British Museum; Royal Veterinary College
Author abbrev. (zoology)Cobbold

Thomas Spencer Cobbold FRS (26 May 1828 – 10 March 1886) was an English biologist.[1][2]

Life

He was born at Ipswich, the third son of Rev. Richard Cobbold, author of the History of Margaret Catchpole.[3]

After graduating in medicine at the University of Edinburgh in 1851, he was appointed lecturer on botany at St Mary's Hospital, London in 1857, and also on zoology and comparative anatomy at Middlesex Hospital in 1861.[3] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in June, 1864.[2]

From 1868 he acted as Swiney Lecturer on geology at the British Museum until 1873, when he became professor of botany at the Royal Veterinary College, afterwards filling a chair of helminthology which was specially created for him at that institution.[3] He was president of the Quekett Microscopical Club from 1879-80. He died in London on 20 March 1886.

His special subject was helminthology, particularly the worms parasitic in man and animals, and as a physician he gained a considerable reputation in the diagnosis of cases depending on the presence of such organisms.[3]

Works

His numerous writings include:

Scholia has a profile for Thomas Spencer Cobbold (Q3525586).
  • 'Entozoa ; an introduction to the study of Helminthology, with reference more particularly to the internal parasites of man,' 1864.
  • 'Entozoa,' a supplement to the last work, 1869.
  • 'The Grouse Disease,' 1873.
  • 'The Internal Parasites of our Domesticated Animals,' 1873.
  • ' Parasites,' 1879.
  • 'Tapeworms,' 1866; fourth edition, 1883.
  • 'Worms,' 1872.
  • 'Human Parasites,' 1882.
  • 'Parasites of Meat and Prepared Flesh Food,' 1884.
  • 'Our Food-producing Ruminants and the Parasites which reside in them,' Cantor Lectures, 1871.
  • 'Catalogue of the Specimens of Entozoa in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England,' 1866.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Bettany, G. T.; Osborne, P. (2006). "Cobbold, Thomas Spencer (1828–1886), helminthologist". In Osborne, Peter (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5739. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 26 January 2022. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b "Record: Cobbold; Thomas Spencer (1828 - 1886)". catalogues.royalsociety.org. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  4. ^ Bettany 1887.

References

Attribution:

External links

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Thomas Cobbold
brewer
(1680–1752)
Mary Woodthorpe
(died 1758)
Thomas Cobbold
(1708–1767)
Sarah Cobbold
(1717–1777)
Isabella Garrett
(died 1777)
William Cobbold
(1747–1795)
Elizabeth Wilkinson
(1753–1790)
John Cobbold
(1746–1835)
Elizabeth Knipe
novelist and poet
(1765–1824)
Mary Anne Trapnell
(1781–1810)
Thomas Cobbold
(1772–1835)
Harriet Temple Chevallier
(1775–1851)
John Wilkinson Cobbold
(1774–1860)
Richard Cobbold
novelist and priest
(1797–1877)
Mary Anne Waller
(1801–1876)
Mary Anne Cobbold
(1806–1868)
Francis Cobbold
priest
(1803–1844)
John Chevallier Cobbold
brewer, railway developer and politician
(1797–1882)
Lucy Patteson
(1800–1879)
Thomas Spencer Cobbold
scientist
(1828–1886)
Edward Augustus Cobbold
priest
(1825–1900)
Mathilda Caroline Smith
(1826–1923)
Charles Chevallier
priest and canon
(1823–1885)
Isobella Frances Cobbold
(1834–1917)
John Patteson Cobbold
politician
(1831–1875)
Adela Harriette Dupuis
(1837–1917)
Nathanael Fromanteel Cobbold
(1839–1886)
Caroline Ellen Boutell
(1843–1882)
William Nevill "Nuts" Cobbold
footballer
(1863–1922)
Maj. Ernest St George Cobbold
(1840–1895)
Helen Emma Cazenove
(1842–1917)
Thomas Clement Cobbold
diplomat
(1833–1883)
Felix Thornley Cobbold
barrister and politician
(1841–1909)
John Barrington Chevallier
(1857–1940)
Isabel Amy Cobbold
(1869–1931)
John Dupuis Cobbold
(1861–1929)
Lady Evelyn Murray
later Zainab Cobbold
(1867–1963)
Ralph Patteson Cobbold
British Army soldier and writer
(1869–1965)
Clement John Cobbold
(1882–1961)
Stella Willoughby Cameron
(1882–1918)
Lady Blanche Katharine Cavendish
(1898–1987)
John Murray Cobbold
(1897–1944)
Pamela Cobbold
(1900–1932)
Charles Jocelyn Hambro
merchant banker and intelligence officer
(1897–1963)
Lady Margaret Hermione Lytton
(1905–2004)
Cameron Fromanteel Cobbold,
1st Baron Cobbold
(1904–1987)
John Cavendish Cobbold
businessman
(1927–1983)
Patrick Mark Cobbold
businessman
(1934–1994)
Charles Eric "Charlie" Hambro,
Baron Hambro
(1930–2002)
David Antony Lytton Cobbold,
2nd Baron Cobbold
(1937–2022)
Henry Fromanteel Lytton Cobbold,
3rd Baron Cobbold
(born 1962)
Notes
  • Cobbold Family History Trust
Family tree of the Cobbold family