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:'''Links:''' [https://human-embryology.org/wiki/Domenech-Mateu_Collection Domenech-Mateu Collection] | [[Human Embryo Collections]] | [[Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Professor Orts Llorca]] | [http://www.institut-kaplan.com/en/emanuel-b-kaplan-award/ Emanuel B. Kaplan Award] | {{scoliosis}} | [https://www.uab.cat/web/sala-de-premsa/detall-de-noticia/mor-el-professor-josep-maria-domenech-1345667174054.html?noticiaid=1345779852324 January 2, 2019 - in memoriam]
:'''Links:''' [[:File:Josep Maria Domènech Mateu.jpg|image 2]] | [https://human-embryology.org/wiki/Domenech-Mateu_Collection Domenech-Mateu Collection] | [[Human Embryo Collections]] | [[Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Professor Orts Llorca]] | [http://www.institut-kaplan.com/en/emanuel-b-kaplan-award/ Emanuel B. Kaplan Award] | {{scoliosis}} | [https://www.uab.cat/web/sala-de-premsa/detall-de-noticia/mor-el-professor-josep-maria-domenech-1345667174054.html?noticiaid=1345779852324 January 2, 2019 - in memoriam]




==Professor José Ramón Sañudo - in memoriam==
==Professor José Ramón Sañudo - in memoriam==
[[File:Josep Maria Domènech Mateu.jpg|thumb|Josep Maria Domènech Mateu]]
January 2, 2019
January 2, 2019


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Professor José Ramón Sañudo (Professor of Anatomy and Embryology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
Professor José Ramón Sañudo (Professor of Anatomy and Embryology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid)


''I arrived in 1980 with a suitcase full of enthusiasm and a scholarship from the Basque Government to start my career as an anatomist with the teacher Josep Maria Domènech Mateu. With him he has died all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my teacher.  
''I arrived in 1980 with a suitcase full of enthusiasm and a scholarship from the Basque Government to start my career as an anatomist with the teacher Josep Maria Domènech Mateu. With him he has died all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my teacher.''


Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu, natural of Valls, son of a medical father, studied medicine at the University of Barcelona, ​​where he met the professor of Human Anatomy and Embryology Domingo Ruano Gil, disciple of Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Francisco Orts Llorca]], eminent embryologist of the University Complutense of Madrid.  
''Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu, natural of Valls, son of a medical father, studied medicine at the University of Barcelona, ​​where he met the professor of Human Anatomy and Embryology Domingo Ruano Gil, disciple of [[Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Francisco Orts Llorca]], eminent embryologist of the University Complutense of Madrid.''


As a student, his career was exceptional, with qualifications counted on honor placements in each and every one of the subjects he attended. He served military service as a lieutenant of the Navy in Madrid, where he had the opportunity to go to the department that was the vanguard in research, led by Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Orts Llorca]], who from the beginning welcomed him as a son and, in a short time, he became the brightest of his disciples.  
''As a student, his career was exceptional, with qualifications counted on honor placements in each and every one of the subjects he attended. He served military service as a lieutenant of the Navy in Madrid, where he had the opportunity to go to the department that was the vanguard in research, led by [[Embryology History - Francisco Orts-Llorca|Orts Llorca]], who from the beginning welcomed him as a son and, in a short time, he became the brightest of his disciples.''


He finished the doctoral thesis on the thoracic duct in a record time and after three years he was already an adjunct professor by opposition; In two more years he gained the aggregate in chair and with 30 years he took possession of the place at the [[https://www.uab.cat/ Autonomous University of Barcelona] (UAB), where he developed all his professional, teaching and research activity as Anatomy professor and Embryology until he retired.  
''He finished the doctoral thesis on the thoracic duct in a record time and after three years he was already an adjunct professor by opposition; In two more years he gained the aggregate in chair and with 30 years he took possession of the place at the [https://www.uab.cat/ Autonomous University of Barcelona] (UAB), where he developed all his professional, teaching and research activity as Anatomy professor and Embryology until he retired.''


He made the textbook of his teacher Orts Llorca the head book of all his students at the UAB. A modern anatomy, inspired by the treatise of German [https://www.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/Englisch/helios/digi/anatomie/braus.html Herman Braus], in which anatomy, morphology, was explained from its root cause (ontogeny and phylogeny) to its function, without forgetting the excellent ones descriptions from the French anatomy school and the clinical interest.  
''He made the textbook of his teacher Orts Llorca the head book of all his students at the UAB. A modern anatomy, inspired by the treatise of German [https://www.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/Englisch/helios/digi/anatomie/braus.html Herman Braus], in which anatomy, morphology, was explained from its root cause (ontogeny and phylogeny) to its function, without forgetting the excellent ones descriptions from the French anatomy school and the clinical interest.''


Many of their students will remember their extraordinary classes. I witnessed his teaching by accompanying him daily. His contagious enthusiasm, the easy word, didactic simplicity, scientific rigor and prodigious memory were often worthy of the applause of his students when the class was over. An unusual thing.
''Many of their students will remember their extraordinary classes. I witnessed his teaching by accompanying him daily. His contagious enthusiasm, the easy word, didactic simplicity, scientific rigor and prodigious memory were often worthy of the applause of his students when the class was over. An unusual thing.''


Thus he taught us the description of the ureterovesical sphincter of Salvador Gil Vernet, a scientist and anatomist of his beloved Tarragona; the theory of the organization of the myocardium of Torrent Guash, modest cardiologist of Dénia that revolutionized the interpretation of cardiac function on a global scale, or that of other illustrious scientists who invited to lecture those eager students.  
''Thus he taught us the description of the ureterovesical sphincter of Salvador Gil Vernet, a scientist and anatomist of his beloved Tarragona; the theory of the organization of the myocardium of Torrent Guash, modest cardiologist of Dénia that revolutionized the interpretation of cardiac function on a global scale, or that of other illustrious scientists who invited to lecture those eager students.''


His investigations in the field of the descriptive and experimental embryology of the heart earned him multiple national and international recognitions: the National Prize of the [https://www.escardio.org/The-ESC/Member-National-Cardiac-Societies/Spanish-Society-of-Cardiology Spanish Society of Cardiology] in 1981, the Narcís Monturiol medal of the Generalitat de Catalunya in 1986 and finally , the honor of being a permanent member of the [https://www.barcelonabusturistic.cat/en/royal-academy-medicine-catalonia Royal Academy of Medicine of Catalonia], in continuity with the great anatomist of the 18th century, and also of Tarragona, Antoni Gimbernat.  
''His investigations in the field of the descriptive and experimental embryology of the heart earned him multiple national and international recognitions: the National Prize of the [https://www.escardio.org/The-ESC/Member-National-Cardiac-Societies/Spanish-Society-of-Cardiology Spanish Society of Cardiology] in 1981, the Narcís Monturiol medal of the Generalitat de Catalunya in 1986 and finally , the honor of being a permanent member of the [https://www.barcelonabusturistic.cat/en/royal-academy-medicine-catalonia Royal Academy of Medicine of Catalonia], in continuity with the great anatomist of the 18th century, and also of Tarragona, Antoni Gimbernat.''


His research is associated with the direction of important doctoral theses, nowadays embodied in great figures of Catalan medicine, in the fields of urology, otolaryngology, general surgery, ophthalmology, teratogenesis, plastic surgery, radiology and traumatology.  
''His research is associated with the direction of important doctoral theses, nowadays embodied in great figures of Catalan medicine, in the fields of urology, otolaryngology, general surgery, ophthalmology, teratogenesis, plastic surgery, radiology and traumatology.''


And yet, the most valuable legacy that leaves us is the collection of human embryos and fetuses, which, until today, is called Bellaterra, deserves to have the name of Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu Collection, as it was He, with the help of generous donors, was able to create it throughout his 40 years of dedication to the UAB.  
''And yet, the most valuable legacy that leaves us is the collection of human embryos and fetuses, which, until today, is called Bellaterra, deserves to have the name of Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu Collection, as it was He, with the help of generous donors, was able to create it throughout his 40 years of dedication to the UAB.''


With him he dies all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the Department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my Master. Rest In Peace.''
''With him he dies all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the Department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my Master. Rest In Peace.''




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Editor-in-chief of the European Journal of Anatomy Magazine
Editor-in-chief of the European Journal of Anatomy Magazine
===Reference===
===Reference===




{{Footer}}
{{Footer}}
[[Category:People]][[Category:Spain]]
[[Category:People]][[Category:Domenech-Mateu Collection]][[Category:Spain]]

Latest revision as of 21:29, 13 September 2019

José María Doménech Mateu

Profesor Catedrático de la Cátedra de Anatomía y Embriología humana de la Facultad de Medicina. Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona.

Josep Maria Domenech Mateu (1944 - 2019) was full professor of human anatomy at the Department of Morphological Sciences at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. Born in Valls in 1944, Domenech Mateu is a medical doctor and descendant of John and Giné Partagàs (a sister whose mother was the paternal grandmother, Dolores and Gine Gine). Doctorate received in 1972 with a thesis directed by Professor Orts Llorca.

Member of the Institute of Catalan Studies and academic member of the Royal Academy of Medicine of Catalonia since 1996, when he entered with a speech on Morphogenesis His-Tawara system memory and anatomical fibrous skeleton of the heart. He has received numerous scientific awards, including the National Prize of Cardiology (1981). In 1986 he received the medal Narcís Monturiol and the 1991 international award Emanuel B. Kaplan. In his long career in research published over 150 scientific papers, especially in the field of embryology and anatomy. He brought together human embryology for the Bellaterra Collection. He is a patron of the Chiari Scoliosis Syringomyelia Foundation.

(Text translated and modified from https://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josep_Maria_Domènech_Mateu)


Links: image 2 | Domenech-Mateu Collection | Human Embryo Collections | Professor Orts Llorca | Emanuel B. Kaplan Award | scoliosis | January 2, 2019 - in memoriam


Professor José Ramón Sañudo - in memoriam

Josep Maria Domènech Mateu

January 2, 2019

Google translated from UAB Catalonian

Professor José Ramón Sañudo (Professor of Anatomy and Embryology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid)

I arrived in 1980 with a suitcase full of enthusiasm and a scholarship from the Basque Government to start my career as an anatomist with the teacher Josep Maria Domènech Mateu. With him he has died all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my teacher.

Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu, natural of Valls, son of a medical father, studied medicine at the University of Barcelona, ​​where he met the professor of Human Anatomy and Embryology Domingo Ruano Gil, disciple of Francisco Orts Llorca, eminent embryologist of the University Complutense of Madrid.

As a student, his career was exceptional, with qualifications counted on honor placements in each and every one of the subjects he attended. He served military service as a lieutenant of the Navy in Madrid, where he had the opportunity to go to the department that was the vanguard in research, led by Orts Llorca, who from the beginning welcomed him as a son and, in a short time, he became the brightest of his disciples.

He finished the doctoral thesis on the thoracic duct in a record time and after three years he was already an adjunct professor by opposition; In two more years he gained the aggregate in chair and with 30 years he took possession of the place at the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB), where he developed all his professional, teaching and research activity as Anatomy professor and Embryology until he retired.

He made the textbook of his teacher Orts Llorca the head book of all his students at the UAB. A modern anatomy, inspired by the treatise of German Herman Braus, in which anatomy, morphology, was explained from its root cause (ontogeny and phylogeny) to its function, without forgetting the excellent ones descriptions from the French anatomy school and the clinical interest.

Many of their students will remember their extraordinary classes. I witnessed his teaching by accompanying him daily. His contagious enthusiasm, the easy word, didactic simplicity, scientific rigor and prodigious memory were often worthy of the applause of his students when the class was over. An unusual thing.

Thus he taught us the description of the ureterovesical sphincter of Salvador Gil Vernet, a scientist and anatomist of his beloved Tarragona; the theory of the organization of the myocardium of Torrent Guash, modest cardiologist of Dénia that revolutionized the interpretation of cardiac function on a global scale, or that of other illustrious scientists who invited to lecture those eager students.

His investigations in the field of the descriptive and experimental embryology of the heart earned him multiple national and international recognitions: the National Prize of the Spanish Society of Cardiology in 1981, the Narcís Monturiol medal of the Generalitat de Catalunya in 1986 and finally , the honor of being a permanent member of the Royal Academy of Medicine of Catalonia, in continuity with the great anatomist of the 18th century, and also of Tarragona, Antoni Gimbernat.

His research is associated with the direction of important doctoral theses, nowadays embodied in great figures of Catalan medicine, in the fields of urology, otolaryngology, general surgery, ophthalmology, teratogenesis, plastic surgery, radiology and traumatology.

And yet, the most valuable legacy that leaves us is the collection of human embryos and fetuses, which, until today, is called Bellaterra, deserves to have the name of Josep Maria Domènech i Mateu Collection, as it was He, with the help of generous donors, was able to create it throughout his 40 years of dedication to the UAB.

With him he dies all the time. We were 24 years together, the circumstances separated us. And now I want to dedicate, from the Department that saw him be born as an anatomist and embryologist, this modest memory to my Master. Rest In Peace.


José Ramón Sañudo

Professor of Anatomy and Embryology. Universidad Complutense de Madrid

President of the European Society of Clinical Anatomy

Editor-in-chief of the European Journal of Anatomy Magazine

Reference


Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, March 28) Embryology Jose Maria Domenech Mateu.jpg. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/File:Jose_Maria_Domenech_Mateu.jpg

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