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Prominent Lebanese Emigrants| Peter Medawar, Winner of the 1960 Nobel Prize in
Medecine
Peter Medawar, Winner of the
1960 Nobel Prize in Medecine
Peter
Brian Medawar was born on February 28, 1915, in Rio de Janeiro, the son of a Lebanese
father and an English mother.
Medawar was educated at Marlborough College, England, where he went in 1928. Leaving this
College in 1932, he went to Magdalen
College, Oxford, to study zoology under Professor J. Z. Young. After taking his
bachelor's degree at Oxford, Medawar worked for a time at Sir Howard Florey's School
of Pathology at Oxford and there became interested in research in fields of biology that
are related to medicine.
In 1935 he was appointed Christopher Welch Scholar and Senior Demonstrator at Magdalen
College, Oxford, and in 1938 he became, by examination, a Fellow of Magdalen College. In
1942 he was Rolleston Prizeman and in 1944 he became Senior Research Fellow of St John's College, Oxford, and
University Demonstrator in zoology and comparative anatomy. In 1946 he was elected a
Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, and in 1947 he was appointed Mason Professor of
Zoology at the University of Birmingham.
In 1951 he moved to London as Jodrell Professor of Zoology at University College, London. Here he
remained until 1962, when he was appointed Director of the National Institute for Medical Research,
London.
Medawar's earlier research, done at Oxford, was on tissue culture, the regeneration of
peripheral nerves and the mathematical analysis of the changes of shape of organisms that
occur during this development. During the early stages of the Second World War he was
asked by the Medical Research Council
to investigate why it is that skin taken from one human being will not form a permanent
graft on the skin of another person, and this work enabled him to establish theorems of
transplantation immunity which formed the basis of his further work on this subject. When
he moved to Birmingham in 1947 he continued to work on it, in collaboration with R.
Billingham, and together they studied there problems of pigmentation and skin grafting in
cattle, and the use of skin grafting to distinguish between monozygotic and dizygotic
twins in cattle. In this work they took into consideration the work of R. D. Owen and
concluded that the phenomenon that they called «actively acquired tolerance» of
homografts could be artificially reproduced. For this earlier work on transplantation and
growth, Medawar was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, London. When he moved to London in 1951, Medawar
continued to work with R. Billingham and L. Brent, on this phenomenon of tolerance, and
his detailed analysis of it occupied him for several years. He also carried out other
researches into transplantation immunity.
The Royal Society of London, where he was the Croonian Lecturer in 1958, awarded him the
Royal Medal in 1959. In the same year, he was Reith Lecturer for the British Broadcasting
Corporation. He has been elected a Foreign Member of the New York Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society.
In 1937 Medawar married Jean Shinglewood Taylor, daughter of a Cambridge physician. They
have two sons, Charles and Alexander, and two daughters, Caroline and Louise.
From Nobel
Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam,
1964
This autobiography/biography was written
at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix
Nobel/Nobel
Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the
Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Peter Medawar died in 1987.
For more updated biographical
information, see:
Medawar, Peter Brian. Memoirs of a Thinking Radish: An Autobiography. Oxford
University Press, Oxford, 1986.
Related Link: Biography of Sir Peter Medawar
on Magdalen College website
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