István Rusznyák

István Rusznyák (Budapest, 22 January 1889 – Budapest, 15 October 1974), was a Hungarian physician. He was the President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences between 1949 and 1970.

István Rusznyák
István Rusznyák
Born22 January 1889
Budapest
Died15 October 1974 (1974-10-16) (aged 85)
NationalityHungarian
AwardsLomonosov Gold Medal (1968)
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Szeged

Biography

Rusznyák came from a family of Jewish intellectuals. In 1911 he got a diploma in medicine from the Budapest University of Medical Sciences. He worked in the Pathology Department. He fought in the First World War. In 1926, private professor lecturers, he worked as a lecturer on.

Between 1931-1945 he was the director of the Department of Medicine i Medical Faculty of University of Szeged. In 1937/38 school year he was elected dean. With start of Second World War In 1944, he was deported to Austria. At the end of the Second World War, he came back in Budapest and worked as the Head of the Department of Internal Medicine. In 1946, he was elected a full member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and was elected its president in 1949. In 1963, he retired as a university professor but he continued as the President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences until 1970. He remained an academic advisor from 1971 until his death in 1974.

Contributions

Along with Albert Szent-Györgyi he discovered Vitamin P and proved that chemically it belongs to the flavones.[1]

gollark: Hahahahanope.
gollark: I don't think they could ever really be depleted anyway.
gollark: I predict that the "boredom point" when people mostly leave and/or stop consuming large amounts of metals will occur before the ore depletion point.
gollark: Er, it's not bound to happen.
gollark: Assuming 100 ores a chunk, we have >50 million.

References

  1. Schneider, William H. (2002). Rockefeller Philanthropy and Modern Biomedicine. Indiana University Press. p. 96. ISBN 0253109604.
Cultural offices
Preceded by
Zoltán Kodály
President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
19491970
Succeeded by
Tibor Erdey-Grúz
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