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  1. Laurentius Blumentrost (Moscú, 1692 - San Petersburgo, 1755) fue un médico y explorador ruso, [1] fundador y primer presidente de la Academia de Ciencias de San Petersburgo entre el 7 de diciembre de 1725 y el 6 de junio de 1733.

  2. Laurentius Blumentrost (Russian: Лаврентий Лаврентьевич Блументрост; 8 November 1692 – 14 June 1755) was a Russian Imperial state figure, the personal physician to the Tsar Peter the Great, founder and first president of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences, from December 7, 1725, to June 6, 1733.

  3. Laurentius Blumentrost (Moscú, 1692 - San Petersburgo, 1755) fue un médico y explorador ruso, [1] fundador y primer presidente de la Academia de Ciencias de San Petersburgo entre el 7 de diciembre de 1725 y el 6 de junio de 1733.

  4. 1 de sept. de 2020 · Laurentius Blumentrost (1692-1755) was the personal physician to the Czar and the founder and first president of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences from 1725 to 1733. Nicolai Pavlenko (1916-2016), historian and biographer of the Czar, based his ideas on the doctor’s declaration made 4 days before the Czar’s death, and stated:

    • Igor Zimin, Andrzej Grzybowski
    • 2020
  5. Laurentius Blumentrost ( Russian: Лаврентий Лаврентьевич Блументрост; 8 November 1692 – 14 June 1755) was a Russian Imperial state figure, the personal physician to the Tsar Peter the Great, founder and first president of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences, from December 7, 1725, to June 6, 1733. Quick Facts Born, Died ... Close. Biography.

  6. Laurentius Blumentrost . Laurentius Blumentrost (Lavrentii Lavrentyevich Blumentrost, 1692 – 1755) was the first President of the Academy of Sciences. He was born into the family of the Chief Physician of Tsar Alexis (Akeksey Mikhailovich) Romanov. He got his medical education at Leiden University where he defended his thesis in 1713.

  7. Two major figures in this part of the story are Apothecary Chancery employees, and men whose enthusiasm for chemical medicine we have already seen: the apothecary Daniel Gurchin and the physician Laurentius Blumentrost; a third was the churchman Archbishop Afanasii of Kholmogory.