Karl Asmund Rudolphi (14 July 1771 – 29 November 1832) was a Swedish-born German natural history, who is credited with being the "father of helminthology".
His first great publication was a study of parasite, the Enterozoorum Sive Vermium Intestinalium Historia Naturalis. This is the first publication to describe the Nematoda. His second, the "Synopsis cui accedunt mantissima duplex et indices locupletissima" was the first work to detail the life cycle of important nematode parasites of humans, such as Ascariasis.
In 1810 he was appointed Professor of Anatomy and Physiology at the University of Berlin, a position he held until his death. He served two terms as rector of the University, and founded the |Berlin Zootomical Museum (later the Museum für Naturkunde). In 1816, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
In 1821, Rudolphi published his "Grundriss der Physiologie", where he argued that the human should be divided into species, not into races. His work therefore predates "scientific" racism of the Nazism period in German and Scandinavian countries.
Rudolphi died in Berlin in 1832, and was succeeded in his position at the University of Berlin by his greatest student, Johannes Müller. Rudolphi is remembered in numerous species names such as the sei whale, known in older literature as "Rudolphi's Whale" (Turner 1882) or "Rudolphi's rorqual" (e.g. Cocks 1886; Collett 1886; Haldane 1906, 1909; Thompson 1919). He is also commemorated by the German Parasitological Society, who award the Rudolphi Medal for scientific excellence.
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