Date Event Cell First Observed
Date Event Cell First Observed
Date Event Cell First Observed
Event
Cell first observed
1665 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
1670
Anton van Leeuwenhoek, a Dutch biologist, looks at pond water with a microscope he
made lenses for.
Miniature animals
1683 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
1833
Robert Brown, an English botanist, discovered the nucleus in plant cells.
Basic building blocks
1838 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
1839 animal tissue as well is composed of cells. This ended debates that plants and animals were
fundamentally different in structure. He also pulled together and organized previous
statement on cells into one theory, which states: 1 - Cells are organisms and all organisms
consist of one or more cells 2 - The cell is the basic unit of structure for all organisms
Where does life come from
1840
Albrecht von Roelliker discoveres that sperm and eggs are also cells.
Basic unit of life
1845
Carl Heinrich Braun reworks the cell theory, calling cells the basic unit of life.
3rd part to the cell theory added
1855
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. Virchow was also the first to propose that diseased cells
come from healthy cells.
Janssens invention of the microscope , with the aid of his father Hans, allowed English scientist
Robert Hooke to use a primitive microscope to view the cell walls of a piece of cork in 1663.
Robert Hooke (1663 1665)
The cell was discovered by Robert Hooke in 1665. He examined very thin slices of cork and saw
a multitude of tiny pores that he remarked looked like the walled compartments a monk would
live in. Because of this association, Hooke called them cells, the name they still bear. However,
Hooke did not know their real structure or function. Hookes description of these cells was
published in Micrographia. His cell observations gave no indication of the nucleus and other
organelles found in most living cells.
Anton Van Leeuwenhoek (1674 1683)
Anton van Leeuwenhoek was inspired by the glasses used by drapers to inspect the quality of
cloth. He taught himself new methods for grinding and polishing tiny lenses of great curvature
which gave magnifications up to 270x diameters, the finest known at that time.
These lenses led to the building of Anton Van Leeuwenhoeks microscopes considered the first
practical microscopes, and the biological discoveries for which he is famous. Anton Van
Leeuwenhoek was the first to see and describe bacteria (1674), yeast plants, the teeming life in a
drop of water, and the circulation of blood corpuscles in capillaries. During a long life he used
his lenses to make pioneer studies on an extraordinary variety of things, both living and nonliving, and reported his findings
Theodor Schwann (1837 1839)
Matthias Schleiden found that all plants are composed of cells, and communicated the finding to
Schwann, who had found similar structures in the cells. Other researchers confirmed the
similarity, as explained in his book, where he concluded, "All living things are composed of cells
and cell products. This became the cell theory
Matthias Schleiden (1839)
He stated that the different parts of the plant organism are composed of cells. Thus, Schleiden
and Schwann became the first to formulate what was then an informal belief as a principle of
biology equal in importance to the atomic theory of chemistry. He also recognized the
importance of the cell nucleus, and sensed its connection with cell division..
Rudolph Virchow (1855)
Rudolph Virchow suggested that all cells come from pre-existing cells. His aphorismomnis
cellula e cellula meaning every cell from a pre-existing cell became the foundations of division,
even if the process was not fully understood then.
He also stated that not all plants are made up of cells,which eventually lead to the creation of the
cell theory.