328 ANNOTATED LIST OF PERSONS 



"Le style est Phomme meme." For portraits see Abry, p. 387 

 and Petit Larousse illustre, p. 1193. 



Burdon-Sanderson, Sir John Scott (1828-1905). English physician 

 and physiologist. Lecturer at St. Mary's Hospital. Professor in 

 London University and University College of London. Member 

 of the English Rabies Commission (1886). 



Cagniard-Latour (or de la Tour) (1777-1859). French physicist. 

 Invented the siren whistle (1809), called in French cagniardelle. 



Cantani, Arnaldo (1837-1893). Italian physician, clinician and pa- 

 thologist. Son of a Neapolitan physician. Senator. Professor in 

 Pavia and then in University of Naples. Author of several books. 

 Interested especially in infectious diseases. Wrote on cholera. 

 For portrait see Pagel, p. 303. 



Cantoni, Gaetano (1815-1887). Italian student of silkworm diseases. 

 Professor in the Royal Museum in Turin. Founder and director 

 of the High School of Agriculture in Milan. Author of many books 

 and papers on agricultural subjects. Wrote "Trattato completo 

 teorico-pratico di agricoltura," 3d ed., 2 vols., Milan, 1884-5. 



Chamberland, Charles Edouard (1851-1908). French physicist, pa- 

 thologist and bacteriologist. Normal school graduate. One of 

 Pasteur's collaborators. Member of the Legion of Honor. Col- 

 laborated also with Roux, Joubert, Strauss, Fernbach and Jouan. 

 Elected radical Republican Deputy from the Jura in 1885. Author 

 of several independent works: "Origin and Development of Micro- 

 scopic Organisms" (1879), ''Drinking Waters and Epidemic 

 Diseases." Invented the Chamberland filter (1884). For portrait 

 see "Ann. d 1'Inst. Pasteur," May, 1908. 



Chantemesse, Andre (1851 - ). French physician. Professor in the 

 Faculty of Medicine. Officer of the Legion of Honor. Author 

 of "Mosquitos and Yellow Fever," "Flies and Cholera," "Traite" 

 d'hygiene," etc. Collaborated in anti-rabic inoculations at Pasteur 

 Institute. One of the Editors of "Ann. de 1'Inst. Pasteur." 



Charrin, Albert (1857-1907). French physician. One of the discoverers 

 of the glanders bacillus (Bouchard, Capitan et Charrin, "C. R. 

 Acad. d. Sci.," Dec. 26, 1882). Collaborated in anti-rabic inocula- 

 tions at Pasteur Institute. Author of "Les defenses naturelles 

 de 1'organisme" (Paris, 1898). 



Chassang, Alexis (1827-1888). French grammarian, lexicographer and 

 litterateur. Author of many books grammars, dictionaries, 

 anthologies. 



Chauveau, Jean Baptiste Auguste (1827-1917). Distinguished French 

 veterinarian, anatomist, physiologist and pathologist. Commander 

 of the Legion of Honor. Member of the Academy of Sciences and of 



