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  1. Sophia Getzowa (Hebrew: סופיה גצובה, 10 January 1872 /23 January 1872 (N. S.) – 11(12) July 1946) was a Belarusian-born pathologist and scientist in Mandatory Palestine.

  2. 20 de abr. de 2023 · Footnote 14 In 1906, she left the University of Bern, where she was succeeded by the pathologist Sophia Getzowa (1872–1946) in the fall of the same year. Footnote 15 Zipkin took up residence in Berlin as of 1907.

  3. Sophia Getzowa was a Belarusian-born pathologist and scientist in Mandatory Palestine. She grew up in a Jewish shtetl in Belarus and during her medical studies at the University of Bern, she became engaged to Chaim Weizmann, who would become the first president of Israel.

  4. Sophia Getzowa (1937) Sophia Getzowa (russisch Софья Гецова; * 11. Januar jul. / 23. Januar 1872 greg. auf einem Landgut im Rajon Swislatsch; † 12. Juli 1946 in Jerusalem) war eine russische Medizinerin und Hochschullehrerin. Leben

  5. Introduction. For a long time, historical research on the medical profession under National Socialism has focused on perpetrators and, moreover, overwhelming on men. Since the beginning of the 2000s, research into disenfranchised, persecuted and displaced medical physicians has also come into focus.

  6. 3 de nov. de 2020 · In 1907, Dr. Sophia Getzowa described an epithelial cells containing structure called the Solid Cell Nests (SCN) of the thyroid (Getzowa, 1907). SCN are lumen containing irregular structures located within the thyroid in mammals (Harach, 1988 ).

  7. Sophia Getzowa (Hebrew: סופיה גצובה, 10 January 1872 /23 January 1872 (N. S.) - 11(12) July 1946) was a Belarusian-born pathologist and scientist in Mandatory Palestine.