Salvatore Trinchese Explained

Salvatore Trinchese (4 April 1836 – 11 January 1897) was an Italian zoologist who specialised in Mollusca.

Biography

Salvatore Trinchese was born in Martano, a small town in the province of Lecce in Apulia, on 4 April 1836. He attended the Reale Collegio San Giuseppe of Jesuits in Lecce. In 1856, he went to Pisa to study medicine and surgery. In 1860, he graduated and obtained a scholarship which allowed him to study abroad. Thus, in the same year he moved to Paris, where he worked as a researcher in the prestigious laboratories of Claude Bernard, Henri Milne-Edwards, Emile Blanchard and Charles-Philippe Robin. During this period, he started his histological studies on the nervous system and on the systematic microscopy on gastropod molluscs. In 1865, he started to teach mineralogy, geology, zoology and comparative anatomy at the University of Genoa. Then he taught in Bologna and Naples. In 1886, he became the dean of the University of Naples and, after few years, was nominated as the city councilman.

He died of nephritis in Naples on 11 January 1897.

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