Jan Swammerdam

Dutch naturalist
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Quick Facts
Baptized:
Feb. 12, 1637, Amsterdam
Died:
Feb. 15, 1680, Amsterdam

Jan Swammerdam (baptized Feb. 12, 1637, Amsterdam—died Feb. 15, 1680, Amsterdam) was a Dutch naturalist, considered the most accurate of classical microscopists, who was the first to observe and describe red blood cells (1658).

Swammerdam completed medical studies in 1667 but never practiced medicine, devoting himself to microscopical investigations instead. Turning to the study of insects, he accurately described and illustrated the life histories and anatomy of many species. His observations of their development led him to separate insects into four major divisions, according to the degree and type of metamorphosis. Three of these divisions have been more or less retained in modern classification.

During the period he devoted to exhaustive entomological research (1667–73), he completed A General History of Insects, popularly recognized as a major work at the time, and the Bible of Nature, one of the finest collections of microscopical observations ever published. In these works he corrected the physiologist Marcello Malpighi’s conceptions of the insect brain and nervous system and opposed the physician William Harvey’s inconsistent interpretation of insect metamorphosis. He also demonstrated the presence of butterfly wings in caterpillars about to undergo pupation.

Michael Faraday (L) English physicist and chemist (electromagnetism) and John Frederic Daniell (R) British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell.
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Faces of Science

Studying the anatomy of the tadpole and the adult frog, he noted a cleavage in the egg and discovered valves in the lymphatic vessels, now known as Swammerdam valves. He described the ovarian follicles of mammals in the same year as the physician Reinier de Graaf (1672) and devised improved techniques for injecting wax and dyes into cadavers, which had important consequences for the study of human anatomy. His ingenious experiments showed that muscles alter in shape but not in size during contraction, contradicting the classic Greek physician Galen’s popular theory that a material fluid passing through the nerves is responsible for the movement.

After his father refused to continue his financial support, Swammerdam suffered extreme privations. Subject in the last years of his life to fits of depression, he sought relief by becoming a disciple of the religious enthusiast Antoinette Bourignon.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.