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  1. John Hughlings Jackson (1835 - 1911) John Hughlings Jackson nacque il 4 Aprile 1835 a Providence nello Yorkshire (Inghilterra). Figlio di un ricco proprietario terriero, compì i primi studi nelle scuole della contea. All'età di quindici anni fu messo a far pratica presso il Dr. Anderson, assistente presso la facoltà medica dell'Ospedale di ...

  2. Brief Life History of John Hughlings. When John Hughlings Jackson was born on 4 April 1835, in Green Hammerton, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, Samuel Jackson, was 29 and his mother, Sarah Hughlings, was 28. He married Elizabeth Dade Jackson on 25 July 1865, in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England, United Kingdom.

  3. 31 de mar. de 2024 · nervous system. wound. John Hughlings Jackson (born April 4, 1835, Green Hammerton, Yorkshire [now in North Yorkshire], Eng.—died Oct. 7, 1911, London) was a British neurologist whose studies of epilepsy, speech defects, and nervous-system disorders arising from injury to the brain and spinal cord helped to define modern neurology.

  4. 8 de sept. de 2011 · Introduction. John Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911) elaborated the neurological ideas that became foundations of modern neurology. Biographical details for him can be found in his obituaries (John Hughlings Jackson, BMJ 1911; John Hughlings Jackson, Lancet 1911), in the biographical sketches of his lifelong friend Jonathan Hutchinson (Hutchinson, 1911), his colleague and amanuensis James Taylor ...

  5. JOHN HUGHLINGS. (1835-1911) Né dans un canton du Yorkshire où son père avait une petite propriété, John Hughlings Jackson commença, à dix-sept ans, ses études de médecine à York, dans l'école où professait Thomas Leycock. Auprès de lui, il s'intéressa (après avoir été tenté de poursuivre ses études en philosophie) à ce qui ...

  6. Biographical Sketch. John Hughlings Jackson was born on 4 April 1835 at Providence Green, his father's home in Green Hammerton, ten miles northwest of the city of York. He was the youngest of five children, with three brothers and a sister. His father, Samuel Jackson, was a prosperous brewer and farmer.

  7. John Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911) was a preeminent British neurologist in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He began to establish that standing in the 1860s, when he incorporated the evolutionary association psychology of Herbert Spencer into his early analyses of aphasia.