Tang Fei-fan

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Tang Fei-fan
Tang Fei-fan in 1944.jpg
Tang Fei-fan in 1944 in Kunming, Yunnan.
Native name 湯飛凡 (Tāng Fēifán)
Born (1897-07-23)July 23, 1897
Liling, Hunan, Qing Empire
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Beijing, People's Republic of China
Suicide
Other names Tang Ruizhao (湯瑞昭)
Nationality Chinese
Fields Medical microbiology
Institutions Central Epidemic Prevention Laboratory
Education Chengnan School
Alma mater Xiangya College of Medicine
Yale University
Peking Union Medical College
Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Hans Zinsser
Known for Chlamydia trachomatis
Influences Hans Zinsser
Spouse He Lian (何璉) (m. 1925–58) (Tang Fei-fan died in 1958.)

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Tang Fei-fan (simplified Chinese: 汤飞凡; traditional Chinese: 湯飛凡; pinyin: Tāng Fēifán; July 23, 1897 - September 30, 1958) was a Chinese medical microbiologist best known for culturing the Chlamydia trachomatis agent in the yolk sacs of eggs.[1][2]

During the "Pulling Out Bourgeois White Flag Movement", Tang was brought to be persecuted and suffered political persecution in 1957, he fully demonstrated the attitude not to compromise with the Communist Party at all by suicide to end his own life.

Biography

Early life

Tang was born Tang Ruizhao (湯瑞昭) in Tangjiaping Village of Liling, Hunan, on July 23, 1897, to a relatively poor gentry family, during the Qing Empire.[3] He was the second of three children. He had a younger brother, Tang Qiufan (湯秋凡).[3] His father Tang Luquan (湯麓泉) taught at a family friend He Zhongshan's (何忠善) old-style private school, in which Tang Fei-fan studied poetry, history, philosophy, mathematics, and natural science. He's son, He Jian, became Tang Fei-fan's close friend.[3] "Learning from the West with its advanced science and technology;Invigorating the Chinese nation", Tang Fei-fan had often heard the hometown folks talk about reform and revolution in his childhood. When the Chinese were called "sick man of Asia", Tang fei-fan determined to study medicine science.[3]

Education

At the age of twelve, he attended Chengnan School in Changsha, capital of Hunan province.[3] After graduating from the Xiangya College of Medicine (now Xiangya School of Medicine, Central South University) in 1921, he earned his doctor's degree in medical science from Yale University.[3] He went back to China in 1921 and that year studied, then taught at Peking Union Medical College.[3] In 1925 he went to the United States again to study bacteriology under Professor Hans Zinsser at Harvard University.[4] He returned to China in 1929 and in the meantime became professor at Medical School of National Central University.[4] In 1935 he was recruited as a researcher at the British National Institute for Medical Research, a position in which he remained until 1937.[3][4] One day, a Japanese visitor want to shake hands with Tang Fei-fan, he refused and sternly said: "My motherland is being invaded by you country. It's a pity that I can't shake hands with you, please ask your country to stop the invasion of my motherland!"[3]

Sino-Japanese War

Tang Fei-fan and Joseph Needham in 1944 in Kunming, Yunnan.

After the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1938, he founded the Central Epidemic Prevention Laboratory in Kunming, capital of southwest China's Yunnan province, and served as its director.[3][4] He made China's first batch of penicillin vaccines and serum with his team for the soldiers at the front.[4] After war he established China's first antibiotic research and penicillin production workshop, as well as normal BCG vaccine laboratory.[4]

In 1947 he paid a fact-finding visit to the United Kingdom, attended the 4th World Conference of International Union of Microbiological Societies (IUMS) in the Kingdom of Denmark, and became its standing committee.[4]

People's Republic era

After the establishment of the Communist State, Tang successively served as director of Institute of Biological Products of the Ministry of Health, director of Chinese Medical Association, and director general of Chinese Society for Microbiology.[3] In 1950 he joined the newly created National Institute for the Control of Pharmaceutical and Biological Products, working as its director.[3] During his time in office, he directed to develop China's first biological products specification - Verification Regulation of Biological Products (《生物製品檢定規程(草案)》).[3] That same year, a terrible plague hit the whole north China, he developed China's own yellow fever vaccine.[3]

In the mid 1950s, he first cultured the Chlamydia trachomatis agent in the yolk sacs of eggs.

In 1958, the "Pulling Out Bourgeois White Flag Movement" (拔资产阶级白旗运动) broke out.[3] Tang was denounced and labeled as "capitalist academic authority", "scum of the nation", "a faithful running dog for the Kuomintang reactionaries", "American spy", "International spy", "a large white flag on the socialist positions", "ride on the backs of the people", "pseudo scientist", "sell the interests of his own country".[3] Because of the unbearable insult he killed himself on September 30, 1958.[3][5]

In 1978, the Communist Party rehabilitated many victims who suffered political persecution or died in the mass socialism political movements except Tang Fei-fan. In June 1979, the Ministry of Health held a memorial service for him.

In 1981, the I/O Acceleration Technology (IOAT) bestowed its gold medal upon him.[3] But the foreign scholars didn't know that he had died. He was held in high esteem by British sinologist Joseph Needham.[3]

Personal life

In 1925, Tang married He Lian (何璉), daughter of He Jian, a warlord and governor of Hunan province.[3]

References

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External links

See also