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Gheorghe Banu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gheorghe Banu (23 March 1889—15 August 1957) was a Romanian hygienist and politician who served as Health Minister in the Octavian Goga government from 12 December 1937 to 10 February 1938. He was a leading promoter of eugenics among academics in the national capital Bucharest.

He was born in Secuieni, Bacău County. He studied from 1919 to 1921 at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Paris, where he obtained in 1922 his doctorate with thesis Recherches physiologiques sur le développement neuro-musculaire chez l'homme et l'animal.[1] From 1931 to 1944 he was the editor of the Review for Social Hygiene, which he founded.[2]

He died in Bucharest.

Notes

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  1. ^ Banu, Georges (1922). Recherches physiologiques sur le développement neuro-musculaire chez l'homme et l'animal (Thesis) (in French). Paris: L. Maretheux. OCLC 493516408.
  2. ^ "Marius Turda, Eugenism și modernitate. Națiune, rasă și biopolitică în Europa (1870–1950)". www.lapunkt.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved December 4, 2021.

References

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  • Marius Turda, "Gheorghe Banu’s Theory of Rural Biology in the 1920s Romania", in Bărbulescu, C. and Ciupală, A. (eds), Medicine, Hygiene and Society from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Centuries. Editura Mega, Cluj-Napoca, 2012, ISBN 978-606-543-195-9, pp. 125–140.