Ouchterlony Double Diffusion
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Ouchterlony Double Diffusion
Ochterlony or Ouchterlony may refer to: * Ouchterlony Valley, or O' Valley, a town in Gudalur Taluk, Nilgiris district, Tamil Nadu, India People with the surname Ochterlony *David Ochterlony (1758–1825), Massachusetts-born general of the East India Company in British India * David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre (1808–1851), an Anglo-Indian held to be the first person of Asian descent to be elected to the British Parliament * John Ochterlony (1667–1742), Anglican clergyman in the Scottish Episcopal Church and Bishop of Brechin *Matthew Ochterlony (1880–1946), Scottish peer and architect * Robert Ochterlony, Anglican Dean of Brechin in the 1720s Ouchterlony *Örjan Ouchterlony (1914–2004), Swedish bacteriologist and immunologist See also *Ochterlony baronets and the Ochterlony Baronetcy, two titles in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom *Ochterlony Monument or Shaheed Minar, a monument in Kolkata. India *Ouchterlony double immunodiffusion Ouchterlony double immunodiffusion ( ...
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Ouchterlony Valley
O' Valley or Ouchterlony Valley is a Town Panchayat in the Gudalur Taluk of The Nilgiris district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The name is a contraction of an older name after a James Ouchterlony, who established coffee plantations in the area. This panchayat area is located between Mudumalai National Park and New Amarambalam Reserved Forest and has several valleys, streams and water falls. History The Gudalur and Pandalur taluks of Nilgiris district one time together constituted the Southeast Wayanad. The total area of Gudalur and the neighboring town of Pandalur is approximately 124,800 acres. In medieval times, before the arrival of the British, the area was divided between three rulers: Vallavanoor, the leader of the Panniyas, Nelliarasi, another adivasi ruler, and the Nilambur Kovilakam, a kingdom based in present-day Kerala. Subsequently, the Kovilakam decided to expand its borders by conquering the other two areas. Vallavanoor was killed and Nelliarasi kidnap ...
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David Ochterlony
Major-General Sir David Ochterlony, 1st Baronet GCB (12 February 1758 – 14 July 1825) was a Massachusetts born military officer of the East India Company in British India. He held the powerful post of British Resident to the Mughal court at Delhi. Biography Background David Ochterlony was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the eldest son of Captain David Ochterlony (also Ochterloney) and his wife, Katherine Tyler. His father was born into an ancient family in Forfarshire, Scotland, and his mother was born in Boston to settlers of English and Welsh descent. His mother was the niece of Sir William Pepperrell. He attended the Boston Latin School and Dummer Charity School (now known as The Governor's Academy) in nearby Byfield, Massachusetts. He had two younger brothers, Gilbert and Alexander, and a sister, Catherine. Captain Ochterlony died in the Saint Vincent, West Indies, in 1765, after which his widow moved to England and his mother remarried to Sir Isaac Heard, Garter King-of- ...
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David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre
David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre (18 December 1808 – 1 July 1851), also known as D. O. Dyce Sombre and David Dyce Sombre, was an Anglo-Indian held to be the first person of Asian descent to be elected to the British Parliament. He was elected to represent the Sudbury constituency in July 1841, but was removed in April 1842 due to bribery in the election. He was named after the British Resident at Delhi, David Ochterlony. Lineage and background David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre was great-grandson of Walter Reinhardt Sombre (c. 1725 – 1778), a mercenary soldier who lived for many years in India. Walter Reinhardt Sombre had two wives, both of whom were Indian Muslim women; the senior wife is known only as ''Badi Bibi'' ("senior lady"), while the second wife was the famous Begum Samru (c. 1753–1836). The name "Samru" is the local corruption of the name "Sombre", and Begum, a Kashmiri Muslim by birth, converted in 1781 to the Catholic faith. A fabulously wealthy woman, she was left w ...
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John Ochterlony
John Ochterlony, MA (1667–1742) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1731 to 1742. Biography He was consecrated a college bishop in the Scottish Episcopal Church on 4 June 1727 at Edinburgh by bishops Freebairn, Cant and Duncan. He was appointed the Bishop of the Diocese of Brechin The Roman Catholic Diocese of Brechin, also known as the Diocese of Angus, was one of the thirteen pre-Reformation dioceses of Scotland. History The diocese was believed to have been founded by Bishop Samson in 1153, and based at the cathedr ... in December 1731. He died in office in May 1742, aged 75. References 1667 births 1742 deaths Bishops of Brechin (Episcopalian) College bishops 18th-century Scottish Episcopalian bishops {{UK-bishop-stub ...
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Matthew Ochterlony
Sir Matthew Montgomery Ochterlony FRIBA (28 February 1880 – 4 October 1946) was a 20th century Scottish baronet and architect. He largely received commissions for large villas for monied friends, but in later years did much work for the Episcopal Church (including stained glass design). He ventured into hydro-electric schemes at the end of his career. Life He was born on 28 February 1880 at Balmadie House in Juniper Green, south-west of Edinburgh, the son of Sir David Ochterlony 3rd Baronet of Ochterlony. He was educated at the Edinburgh Institution from 1892 to 1894. In 1899 he was articled to John Kinross and Harold Tarbolton to train as an architect, based at 2 Abercromby Place in Edinburgh, also studying at Edinburgh School of Applied Art. He took a break due to ill-health 1902 to 1905 and became involved in woodwork and stained glass. He returned to architecture in 1905 again with Kinross and Tarbolton. In 1911 he joined John More Dick Peddie. In 1916 he enlis ...
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Robert Ochterlony
Robert Ochterlony was Dean of Brechin during the 1720s (in 1727).”Scottish Episcopal Clergy, 1689-2000” Bertie, D.M p549: Edinburgh T & T Clark p549 Notes Scottish Episcopalian clergy Deans of Brechin {{Christian-clergy-stub ...
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Örjan Ouchterlony
Örjan Thomas Ouchterlony (January 14, 1914, Stockholm – September 25, 2004) was a Swedish bacteriologist and immunologist who is credited with the creation of the Ouchterlony double immuno diffusion test in the 1940s. He was trained at Karolinska Institute, where his received his medical doctorate. He worked at Sweden's State Bacteriology Laboratory from 1935 to 1952. (The cover of the May 1986 issue pictures Professor Ouchterlony and an Ouchterlony plate.) Ouchterlony was a professor of bacteriology at the Medical Faculty of Gothenburg University The University of Gothenburg ( sv, Göteborgs universitet) is a university in Sweden's second largest city, Gothenburg. Founded in 1891, the university is the third-oldest of the current Swedish universities and with 37,000 students and 6000 s ... from 1952 to 1980 and was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1968. In addition to his laboratory work, he did research in field epidemiology of infectious dise ...
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Ochterlony Baronets
The Ochterlony Baronetcy, oin the County of Angus, and the Ochterlony Baronetcy, of Ochterlony in the County of Forfar, were two titles in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom, both created for Major-General Sir David Ochterlony. The Ochterlony Baronetcy of Pitforthy was created on 7 March 1816, with normal remainder to the heirs male of his body. The Ochterlony Baronetcy of Ochterlony was created on 8 December 1823 with remainder to Roderick Peregrine Ochterlony and the heirs male of his body. Ochterlony never married (although he had six natural children by at least two of his thirteen concubines), and on his death in 1825 the 1816 creation became extinct. He was succeeded in the 1823 creation according to the special remainder by his natural grandson Charles Metcalfe Ochterlony (1817–1891), the son of his only son Roderick Peregrine Ochterlony, of Delhi (1785-d by 1823) by his wife Sarah Nelly, the daughter of Lt. Col. John Nelly of the Bengal Engineers, at Allahabad, Ind ...
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Ochterlony Monument
The Shaheed Minar (English language, English: ''Martyrs' Monument''), formerly known as the Ochterlony Monument, is a monument in Kolkata that was erected in 1828 in memory of Major-general Sir David Ochterlony, commander of the British East India Company, to commemorate both his successful defense of Delhi against the Marathas in 1804 and the victory of the East India Company’s armed forces over the Gurkhas in the Anglo-Nepalese War, also known as the Gurkha War. The monument was constructed in his memory. It was designed by J.P. Parker and paid for from public funds. On 9 August 1969, it was rededicated to the memory of the martyrs of the Indian freedom movement and renamed the "''Shaheed Minar''," which means "martyrs' monument" in both Bengali language, Bengali and Hindi language, Hindi, by the then United Front (India), United Front Government in memory of the martyrs of the Indian independence movement. The present government has decided to illuminate the tower during e ...
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