cell theory

  • cell first observed

    Robert Hooke, an English scientist, discovered a honeycomb-like structure in a cork slice using a primitive compound microscope. He only saw cell walls as this was dead tissue. He coined the term "cell" for these individual compartments he saw.
  • first living cells seen

    Anton van Leeuwenhoek, a Dutch biologist, looks at pond water with a microscope he made lenses for.
  • minature animals

    Anton van Leeuwenhoek made several more discoveries on a microscopic level, eventually publishing a letter to the Royal Society in which he included detailed drawings of what he saw. Among these was the first protozoa and bacteria discovered.
  • The center of the cell seen

    Robert Brown, an English botanist, discovered the nucleus in plant cells.
  • Basic building blocks

    Matthias Jakob Schleiden, a German botanist, proposes that all plant tissues are composed of cells, and that cells are the basic building blocks of all plants. This statement was the first generalized statement about cells.
  • Cell theory

    Theodor Schwann, a German botanist reached the conclusion that not only plants, but animal tissue as well is composed of cells.
  • Where does life come from

    Albrecht von Roelliker discoveres that sperm and eggs are also cells
  • Basic unit of life

    Carl Heinrich Braun reworks the cell theory, calling cells the basic unit of life.
  • 3rd part to the cell theory added

    Rudolf Virchow, a German physiologist/physician/pathologist added the 3rd part to the cell theory. The original is Greek, and states Omnis cellula e cellula. This translates as all cells develop only from existing cells.