1796 Smallpox vaccine
Smallpox vaccine | |
Official name | Smallpox vaccine |
Year | 1796 |
Date | 05/14 |
Place | Berkeley |
Place | United Kingdom |
Place | Europe |
perps | Edward Jenner |
Official summary
Smallpox vaccine, the first vaccine to be developed, was introduced by Edward Jenner in 1796. He followed up his observation that milkmaids who had previously caught cowpox did not later catch smallpox by showing that inoculated cowpox protected against inoculated smallpox. The word "vaccine" is derived from Variolae vaccinae (i.e. smallpox of the cow), the term devised by Jenner to denote cowpox and used in the long title of his An enquiry into the causes and effects of Variolae vaccinae, known by the name of cow pox. Vaccination, the term which soon replaced cowpox inoculation and vaccine inoculation, was first used in print by Jenner's friend, Richard Dunning in 1800. Initially, the terms vaccine/vaccination referred only to smallpox, but in 1881 Louis Pasteur proposed that to honour Jenner the terms be widened to cover the new protective inoculations being introduced.
Fakeology Analysis
- Fakeologist: Smallpox, polio and other manufactures plagues [ab 1]
- Fakeologist: Vaccines are unavoidably unsafe [ab 2]
- Cluesforum: History of vaccination [CF 1]
- Hoaxbusters: Call 460 - Vaccines, Fukushima, Tim McVeigh, NASA and much more [1]
Mainstream links
- Wikipedia: Invention of the vaccine[MSM 1]
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