New website
- Posted by Stefan Wulle
- on Oct, 30, 2015
- in Posts
- Blog Comments Off on New website
The ISHP has a new website designed to make it easy to update, edit and add new information.
The ISHP has a new website designed to make it easy to update, edit and add new information.
The International Society for the History of Pharmacy was founded 1926.
Throwback of the annual #colloquium of the Kring voor de Geschiedenis van de Farmacie Beneluxthe beautiful Den Bosch!
💡With interesting contributions by, among others, Robin Debo of ETWIE on the production of pharmaceutical accessories, Norbert Peeters on the 🌱botanicus Rumphius, Wim Rakhorst on the archive of Stichting Farmaceutisch Erfgoed and Nanno Bolt on pharmacists in in Den Bosch, the Netherlands.
👋🏻 It was also a nice reunion with Flemish and Dutch colleagues such as Peter van den Hooff and Wouter Klein.
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Congress of the Pharmaceutical Society of the Latin Mediterranean.
Catania.
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💡 The first women to earn a master’s degree in pharmacy 200 years ago!
💊 Konstancja Studzińska (1787–1853) and her sister Filipina Studzińska (1797–1877) became the first women in Europe to earn master’s degrees in pharmacy! 🌿💼 At a time when women were barred from education, their achievements represent a testament to their courage and determination. 🏅
Master of Pharmacy Diploma of Konstancja Studzińska, 1824. Illustration from Wirtualne Muzea Małopolski.
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Nach der dritten Teilung Polens (1795) waren in den an Österreich gelangten polnischen und ukrainischen Landesteilen (Galizien und Lodomerien) die pharmazeutischen Studien- und Prüfungsordnungen Österreichs von 1804 bis 1889 gültig. Und obwohl in Österreich Frauen erst ab 1878 Vorlesungen als Gasthörerinnen besuchen durften, setzte Professor Josef Sawiczewski an der Universität Krakau (Alma Mater Cracoviensis) die Sponsion der Nonnen Filipina und Konstancja StudziĹ„ski 1824 als erste Frauen zu Magistern der Pharmazie durch.
Thank you, Vilma, for sharing this document which beautifully captures an international milestone in women in pharmacy history. While searching for her name, I came across an intriguing detail in the English section of your 2017 book "Social Features of Lithianian Pharmacy from the 19th to the First Half of the 20th Century" which I found on the University's website. It mentions that "The first female pharmacist in Lithuania was Juzefa Girdzijevska – the widow of a pharmacist." This caught my attention because the first female community pharmacist in Turkey, Fatma Belkis Derman, was also married to a pharmacist, Hasan Derman, who later became the president of the Turkish Pharmacists Association. It seems that in male-dominated professions of the past, the initial challenges were often taken up by the wives and daughters of men already established in those fields. Do you think Girdzijevska's entry into pharmacy was influenced by her marriage to a pharmacist?
In 1874 (150 years ago), Jozefa Girdzijevska became the first woman in Lithuania (KÄ—dainiai) to receive permission to work as a pharmacist’s assistant. Russian Empire's authorities debated the permit in confidential correspondence.