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Fabricius

Fabricius (, ) is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • people from the Ancient Roman gens Fabricia:
    • Gaius Fabricius Luscinus, the first of the Fabricii to move to Rome
  • Johann Goldsmid (1587–1616), known by his Latinized name Johann Fabricius, and son of David Fabricius (1564–1617). Astronomer who discovered the variability of the star Mira Ceti in 1596.
  • Carel Fabritius (sometimes spelled Fabricius, 1622–1654), Dutch painter
  • David Fabricius (1564–1617), German theologian and astronomer, discoverer of the variable star Mira
  • Ernst Fabricius (1857–1942), German historian, archaeologist and classical scholar
  • Georg Fabricius (1516–1571), German poet, historian and archaeologist
  • Hieronymus Fabricius or Girolamo Fabrizio (1537–1619), Italian anatomist
  • Hildanus Fabricius (Wilhelm Fabry) (1560–1634), German anatomist and surgeon
  • Johan Fabricius (1899–1981), Dutch writer, journalist and adventurer
  • Johann Albert Fabricius (1668–1736), German classical scholar, publisher, and librarian
  • Johann Phillip Fabricius (1711–1791), German Christian missionary in southern India
  • Johan Christian Fabricius (1745–1808), Danish botanist and entomologist
  • Johannes Fabricius, (1587–1615) Frisian astronomer, discoverer of sunspots, son of David Fabricius
  • Nanna Øland Fabricius (1985–) Danish singer-songwriter, great-great-granddaughter of Otto Fabricius
  • Otto Fabricius (1744–1822) Danish missionary, naturalist, ethnographer and explorer of Greenland
  • Philipp Conrad Fabricius (1714–1774), German botanist
  • Werner Fabricius, German composer, father of Johann Albert Fabricius
  • Wilhelm Fabricius, German ambassador to Romania under Hitler
  • Alexander Carpenter, Latinized Fabricius, (fl. 1429), English religious philosopher and author

Category:Latin-language surnames

Fabricius (crater)

Fabricius is a lunar impact crater that is located within the northeast part of the walled plain Janssen. Attached to the north-northwest rim is the slightly larger cater Metius. Fabricius has multiple central peaks that rise to 0.8 km, with a rugged rise to the northwest running north–south. The rim is lumpy and somewhat distended, most noticeably to the southwest and south. It is 78 kilometers in diameter and 2,500 meters deep. It is from the Eratosthenian period, 3.2 to 1.1 billion years ago. It is named after David Fabricius, a 16th-century German astronomer.

Usage examples of "fabricius".

Bartholinus, Wolff, Schenck, Horstius, Hagendorn, Fabricius Hildanus, Valerius, Rolfinck, Cornarius, Boener, and other older writers cite cases of this kind.

Zacutus Lusitanus, Salmuth, Hngedorn, Fabricius Hildanus, Vesalius, Mead, and Acta Eruditorum all mention instances.

Ballonius, Vogel, Morgagni, the anatomist of the kidney, Schenck, Bartholinus, Bierling, Zacchias, Charleton, Mauriceau, Ephemerides, and Fabricius Hildanus.

Zacchias, Amand, Fabricius Hildanus, Graaf, the discoverer of the follicles that bear his name, Borellus, Blegny, Blanchard, Diemerbroeck, Duddell, Mauriceau, a Reyes, Riolan, Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, Wolfius, Walther, Rongier, Ruysch, Forestus, Ephemerides, and Schurig all mention cases of conception with intact hymen, and in which there was no entrance of the penis.

Bartholinus, Fabricius Hildanus, Paullini, Peyer, Plater, Schurig, Sinibaldus, and Zacchias.

Aventii, Fabricius Hildanus, the Ephemerides, and Curry relate instances of a fatal issue following the ingestion of cold water by an individual in a superheated condition.

Boerhaave, Pare, and Fabricius Hildanus all speak of this untoward effect of venery, and in modern times Poncet has made observations at a hospital in Lyons which prove that during the process of healing wounds are unduly and harmfully influenced by coitus, and cites confirmatory instances.

Bartholinus, Fabricius Hildanus, Pliny, Rhodius, Schenck, Marcellus Donatus, Riedlin, and Garengeot speak of death from fright and fear, and the Ephemerides describes a death the direct cause of which was intense shame.

A review of the literature previous to this century shows the names of Arcaeus, Brunner, Collomb, Fabricius Hildanus, Vogel, Rhodius, Petit, Guerin, Koler, Peters, Flebbe, and Stalpart, as authorities for instances of this nature.

Swammerdam records a similar case, and Fabricius ab Aquapendente noticed a case in which the opening in the thorax showed immediate signs of improvement after the patient voided large quantities of bloody urine.

Bertrand, Fabricius Hildanus, la Motte, Ravaton, Valentini, and Glandorp, record instances of recovery from wounds of the diaphragm.

Horstius, Fabricius Hildanus, and Schenck, all record instances of death from hemorrhage of the gums.

Bonet, Lancisi, Fabricius Hildanus, and other older observers speak of sneezing to death.

Bartholinus, Paullinus, Blanchard, Bonet, the Ephemerides, Fabricius Hildanus, Horstius, Morgagni, Peyer, Rhodius, Vogel, Salmuth, Percy, Laurent, and others describe it.

It contained enough room for the curule chair of Quintus Servilius, a chair for his legate Fonteius, and a third chair for Fabricius himself.