Filippo Bottazzi
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Filippo Bottazzi (23 December 1867 – 19 September 1941) was an Italian biochemist who is considered the father of Italian Biochemistry. Bottazzi conducted experiments on the physiology and biochemical aspects of blood in his early career. His political association with the
fascist Fascism ( ) is a far-right, authoritarian, and ultranationalist political ideology and movement. It is characterized by a dictatorial leader, centralized autocracy, militarism, forcible suppression of opposition, belief in a natural soci ...
regime in Italy and his participation in
antisemitism Antisemitism or Jew-hatred is hostility to, prejudice towards, or discrimination against Jews. A person who harbours it is called an antisemite. Whether antisemitism is considered a form of racism depends on the school of thought. Antisemi ...
led to his scientific contributions being overlooked. Bottazzi was born in Diso,
Apulia Apulia ( ), also known by its Italian language, Italian name Puglia (), is a Regions of Italy, region of Italy, located in the Southern Italy, southern peninsular section of the country, bordering the Adriatic Sea to the east, the Strait of Ot ...
where his father Giuseppe Maria Antonio was an artist. His mother was Maria Donata Cecilia Bortone. He studied medicine in Rome, graduating in 1893 and joining the Institute of Higher, Practical, and Postgraduate Studies of Florence the next year. Bottazzi studied under Giulio Fano who was influenced by the physiology schools of
Luigi Luciani Luigi Luciani ForMemRS (23 November 1842, in Ascoli Piceno – 23 June 1919) was an Italian neuroscientist. He also contributed to Karel Frederik Wenckebach's work on what is now known as second-degree atrioventricular block Second-degree atrio ...
and
Angelo Mosso Angelo Mosso (30 May 1846 – 24 November 1910) was a 19th-century Italian physiologist who invented the first neuroimaging technique, known as 'human circulation balance'. Mosso began his groundbreaking work by recording the pulsations of the h ...
. In 1894 Bottazzi studied the reduction in osmotic resistance experienced by red blood cells during the splenic cycle. He continued his research in the area of the ''milieu interieur'' begun in France by
Claude Bernard Claude Bernard (; 12 July 1813 – 10 February 1878) was a French physiologist. I. Bernard Cohen of Harvard University called Bernard "one of the greatest of all men of science". He originated the term ''milieu intérieur'' and the associated c ...
that compared the life of aquatic and land animals. Bottazzi collaborated with scientists in other countries, he was invited to work with Michael Foster at Cambridge in 1894 and he translated Foster's ''Treatise on Physiology'' in 1899. In 1923 the University of Edinburgh conferred an honorary LL.D. degree to Botttazzi during the eleventh International Physiological Congress. Bottazzi rose to head the Institute of Physiology at the
University of Genoa The University of Genoa () is a public research university. It is one of the largest universities in Italy and it is located in the city of Genoa, on the Italian Riviera in the Liguria region of northwestern Italy. The original university was fou ...
and later at Naples. In early 1940 he was a candidate for the Nobel Prize in medicine but the prizes themselves were suspended until 1943 due to the war. Bottazzi also took an interest in the history of science and in the philosophy of science and its methods. Bottazzi published ''Il metodo sperimentale nelle discipline biologiche'' in 1906 where he examined experimental methods in biology. He celebrated the role of Italian scientists Leonardo, Galileo, Spallanzani, and Bufalini and pointed to biology being best explained by mechanistic or physico-chemical phenomena. He however considered human thought to be different. Botazzi was however not recognized by scientists due to the part he played in fascist politics. He was one of the signatories to the ''Manifesto degli scienziati razzisti'' (
Manifesto of Race The "Manifesto of Race" (), otherwise referred to as the Charter of Race or the Racial Manifesto, was an Italian manifesto promulgated by the government of Benito Mussolini on 14 July 1938. Its promulgation was followed by the enactment, in Octo ...
). Bottazzi became a member of the ''Commissione dell’alimentazione'' created to solve problems of malnutrition arising from the sanctions imposed on Italy from 1926. In 1933 he published a report along with A. Niceforo and G. Quagliarello on the dietary status of Italians. In 1938, a letter was sent by the Ministry of Education to the Accademia d’Italia and it put several scientists in charge of purging all scientific works made by Jewish scientists. The list of scientists included on this purging committee included the chemist Francesco Giordani, admiral Giancarlo Vallauri, mathematician
Francesco Severi Francesco Severi (13 April 1879 – 8 December 1961) was an Italian mathematician. He was the chair of the committee on Fields Medal in 1936, at the first delivery. Severi was born in Arezzo, Italy. He is famous for his contributions to algebra ...
and Bottazzi.


Selected works

* ''La mente e l'opera di Leonardo da Vinci'', Città del Vaticano: Pontificia Academia Scientiarum, 1941. * ''Trattato di Chimica Fisiologica'' (Milan 1898-9) 2 voll, translation into German by H. Boruttau (1901). * ''Principi di Fisiologia'' (Milan 1905-6), * ''Lezioni di Fisiologia Sperimentale'' (Naples 1906), * ''Fisiologia dell'Alimentazione'' (1910, 1919), * ''La Grotta Zinzulusa in Terra d'Otranto ed il ritrovamento in essa di Typhlocaris'' (Catania 1923) with Pasquale De Laurentiis and Gino Stasi.


Bibliography

* Giuseppe Antonio Giannuzzo, Francesco Corvaglia, ''Filippo Bottazzi: vita, opere, giudizi'' (Tricase 1992) * Carlo Stasi, ''Dizionario Enciclopedico dei Salentini'' (Grifo, Lecce, 2018) vol. I, pp.108-109


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Bottazzi, Filippo Italian physiologists 1867 births 1941 deaths