Famous Scientists

  • Home
  • Top 100 Scientists
  • List of Scientists
  • Blog

Santiago Ramón y Cajal

Santiago Ramon y Cajal

Santiago Ramón y Cajal is often called the father of neuroscience. He won the Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine in 1906 for his theory that became known as the neuron doctrine.

Early Life and Education

Santiago Ramón y Cajal was born in Petilla de Aragón in northern Spain on May 1, 1852. His mother’s name was Antonia Cajal. His father, Justo Ramón Casasús, was a surgeon and Professor of Applied Anatomy.

Ramón y Cajal was a mischievous boy, often in trouble at school. He attended several schools, as his family tried to find one he would settle down in and behave properly.

He was very good at drawing, but he did not enjoy the strict and sometimes violent discipline of the monks who taught at his schools.

His father lost patience with the boy and withdrew him from school, apprenticing him to a barber, which did not work out well, and then a cobbler, which also did not work out well. Ramón y Cajal wanted to be an artist and he was very strong-willed. He returned to high school in the town of Huesca.

In the summer of 1868, his anatomist father took the 16 year-old boy to graveyards where the bones of ancient burials had come to the surface. His father hoped that by interesting his son in drawing the bones, he would excite his interest in anatomy.

His father’s ploy worked, because in 1868 Ramón y Cajal enrolled to study medicine at the University of Zaragoza, where his father was a professor.

He performed well at university, under his father’s guidance, and became very skilled at dissection. In fact, he became so good that three years into his course he was employed as a dissection teaching assistant. He also won a prize for top student.

In 1873, after five years at medical school, Ramón y Cajal graduated. He was now qualified to practice medicine. He was just 21.

Soon he was conscripted into the army.

Advertisements

The Army

After a few months in the army Ramón y Cajal applied successfully for the Medical Corps, which had many more applicants than positions.

In 1874, his army unit moved to the Spanish colony of Cuba, where the Ten Years’ War of independence had been fought since 1868. The following year he was posted back to Spain from the tropical nightmare of Cuba. He was suffering from dysentery and malaria. The malaria almost killed him.

Out of the army, he spent time in the care of his mother and sisters in the foothills of the Pyrenees Mountains in northern Spain.

Scientific Career

In late 1875, Ramón y Cajal started as a graduate assistant at the University of Zaragoza. In early 1877, he was promoted to acting assistant professor and awarded a Ph.D. degree in medicine.

In 1879, he became the Director of the Anatomical Museum in the University of Zaragoza’s Faculty of Medicine.

In 1883, he moved to become Professor of Descriptive Anatomy in the University of Valencia’s Faculty of Medicine.

In this early part of his career, he worked on the causes of inflammation, cholera, and the structure of epithelial material.

In 1887, he took the chair of Histology and Pathological Anatomy at the University of Barcelona. It was here he began to make serious use of Golgi’s Method, which would ultimately lead to his Nobel Prize.

In 1892, he became Professor of Anatomy and Histology in the Pathological School of Medicine at the Central University of Madrid. He stayed in this position for thirty years, until he retired in 1922.

Nobel Prize Winning Scientific Research

Golgi’s Method and Nerve Cells / Neurons

In 1873, Camillo Golgi discovered that silver nitrate and potassium dichromate together fixed particles of silver chromate to the membranes of nerve cells. This resulted in the nerve cells becoming visible on a yellow background. (Nerve cells are also known as neurons.)

Nerve cells are extremely important, because they carry information through the body using chemical and electrical signals. Nerve cells carry information to the brain from, for example, our senses such as sight and hearing. Nerve cells also carry the brain’s response back to the body causing, for example, muscle movements.

Understanding the nervous system is vital to our ability to understand the biology of higher living organisms, including humans.

Golgi’s method of staining neurons allowed them to be seen with great clarity for the first time. It was not perfect, however, because fewer than five percent of neurons took up the stain.

In 1887, Ramón y Cajal began using Golgi’s method to study neurons. He improved the method by using higher concentrations of the chemicals, cutting thicker sections of material to study under the microscope, and only using the method to study those neurons that it performed best on. These were neurons with unmyelinated axons. This meant that the axons – these are the structures that carry nerve signals – were not surrounded by fat. Bird brains and mammal embryos contain unmyelinated axons, so were ideal for Ramón y Cajal’s work.

He found he could stain a much greater proportion of neurons than Golgi could.

Bird Cerebellum

Ramón y Cajal’s drawing of the neurons in a bird’s cerebellum – a part of the brain.

The Neuron Doctrine

Within a year Ramón y Cajal published a groundbreaking result. He discovered that the nervous system in bird brains is made up of individual cells touching one another – he could show this clearly, because of the high proportion of cells he was able to stain.

This discovery, in 1888, made it the peak year of his work, according to Ramón y Cajal.

It allowed him to establish proof of the neuron doctrine, which is now the absolute basis of neuroscience.

The neuron doctrine states that neurons are individual, separate cells. They behave as biochemically distinct cells rather than a network of interlinked cells.

Golgi, who invented the stain, disagreed strongly with the neuron doctrine. He maintained that neurons formed an interlinked network which behaved as a single entity. In fact, this was the position of most scientists until Ramón y Cajal established his neuron doctrine.

Rivals Share the Nobel Prize

The Nobel Prize committee decided that Ramón y Cajal and Golgi should share the 1906 Nobel Prize for Medicine/Physiology, even though the two scientists held absolutely opposite views about how the nervous system worked. If one of them was right, the other one must certainly be wrong.

Ramón y Cajal had much better evidence for his position.

It’s likely that Golgi’s prize was for the discovery of the basic technique that allowed Ramón y Cajal to prove the neuron doctrine.

As regards sharing the Nobel Prize with his rival, awarded “in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system,” Ramón y Cajal said:

santiago-cajalWhat a cruel irony of fate, to pair together, like Siamese twins united by the shoulders, scientific adversaries of such contrasting character!

Santiago Ramón y Cajal
 

More charitably, in his autobiography he wrote of the shared prize:

santiago-cajalThe other half was very rightly awarded to the illustrious professor of Pavia, Camillo Golgi, the inventor of the method with which I accomplished my most striking discoveries.

Santiago Ramón y Cajal
 

Photography

Ramón y Cajal was an enthusiastic photographer.

When he first took up photography, people had to pose for several minutes while the photographic plate gathered enough light to produce a picture.

Ramón y Cajal invented a new process in which only three seconds worth of light was needed to produce a photograph. Unfortunately, he learned Thomas Edison had beaten him to it.

As a result of his enthusiasm for photography, more photographs of Ramón y Cajal exist than for most scientists of his era.

For example:

in the mid-1880s in his laboratory with his favorite tool - his microscope.

Santiago Ramón y Cajal in the mid-1880s in his laboratory with his favorite tool – his microscope. Perhaps photographed at the end of a hard day?

santiago-ramon-y-cajal-children

Santiago Ramón y Cajal with his children Fe, Santiago, Jorge and Paula in 1889.

The End

Santiago Ramón y Cajal died at the age of 82, on October 17, 1934. The death of his wife, Doña Silvería Fañanás García, in 1930 had been a blow to his morale. The couple are buried together in Madrid. They were survived by four daughters and two sons.

Advertisements

Author of this page: The Doc
© All rights reserved.

Cite this Page

Please use the following MLA compliant citation:

"Santiago Ramón y Cajal." Famous Scientists. famousscientists.org. 10 Nov. 2014. Web.  
<www.famousscientists.org/santiago-ramon-y-cajal/>.

Published by FamousScientists.org

More from FamousScientists.org:
  • john eccles
    John Eccles
  • carl woese
    Carl Woese
  • linda-buck
    Linda Buck
  • wilder penfield
    Wilder Penfield
Advertisements

Search Famous Scientists

Scientist of the Week

  • Linda Buck: Discovered how we smell things

Recent Scientists of the Week

  • Jan Ingenhousz: Discovered photosynthesis
  • Barry Marshall: Overturned the Medical Establishment
  • Linus Pauling: Maverick Giant of Chemistry
  • William Röntgen: The Discovery of X-rays
  • Howard Florey: Brought penicillin to the world
  • Henrietta Leavitt: The key to the size of the universe
  • Archimedes: A mind beyond his time
  • Stanley Milgram: The infamous Obedience Experiments
  • C. V. Raman: Color change allows harm-free health check of living cells
  • Rosalind Franklin: Shape-shifting DNA
  • Robert Boyle: A new science is born: chemistry
  • Carl Woese: Rewrote Earth’s history of life
  • Alfred Wegener: Shunned after he discovered that continents move
  • Henri Poincaré: Is the solar system stable?
  • Polly Matzinger: The dog whisperer who rewrote our immune system’s rules
  • Otto Guericke: In the 1600s found that space is a vacuum
  • Alister Hardy: Aquatic ape theory: our species evolved in water
  • Elizebeth Friedman: Became the world’s most famous codebreaker
  • Evangelista Torricelli: We live at the bottom of a tremendously heavy sea of air
  • Eudoxus: The first mathematical model of the universe
  • James Black: Revolutionized drug design with the Beta-blocker
  • Inge Lehmann: Discovered our planet’s solid inner core
  • Chen-Ning Yang: Shattered a fundamental belief of physicists
  • Robert Hooke: Unveiled the spectacular microscopic world
  • Barbara McClintock: A Nobel Prize after years of rejection
  • Pythagoras: The cult of numbers and the need for proof
  • J. J. Thomson: Discovered the electron
  • Johannes Kepler: Solved the mystery of the planets
  • Dmitri Mendeleev: Discovered 8 new chemical elements by thinking
  • Maurice Hilleman: Record breaking inventor of over 40 vaccines
  • Marie Curie: Won – uniquely – both the chemistry & physics Nobel Prizes
  • Jacques Cousteau: Marine pioneer, inventor, Oscar winner
  • Niels Bohr: Founded the bizarre science of quantum mechanics
  • Srinivasa Ramanujan: Untrained genius of mathematics
  • Milutin Milankovic: Proved Earth’s climate is regulated by its orbit
  • Antoine Lavoisier: The giant of chemistry who was executed
  • Emmy Noether: The greatest of female mathematicians, she unlocked a secret of the universe
  • Wilder Penfield: Pioneer of brain surgery; mapped the brain’s functions
  • Charles Nicolle: Eradicated typhus epidemics
  • Samuel Morse: The telegraph and Morse code
  • Jane Goodall: Major discoveries in chimpanzee behavior
  • John Philoponus: 6th century anticipation of Galileo and Newton
  • William Perkin: Youthful curiosity brought the color purple to all
  • Democritus: Atomic theory BC and a universe of diverse inhabited worlds
  • Susumu Tonegawa: Discovered how our bodies make millions of different antibodies
  • Cecilia Payne: Discovered that stars are almost entirely hydrogen and helium

Top 100 Scientists

  • Our Top 100 Scientists

Our Most Popular Scientists

  • Astronomers
  • Biologists & Health Scientists
  • Chemists
  • Geologists and Paleontologists
  • Mathematicians
  • Physicists
  • Scientists in Ancient Times

List of Scientists

  • Alphabetical List

Recent Posts

  • Perfect Numbers and our Tiny Universe
  • What Happens when the Universe chooses its own Units?
  • Hipparchus and the 2000 Year-Old Clue
  • Darwin Pleaded for Cheaper Origin of Species
  • You Will Die For Showing I’m Wrong!
  • Getting Through Hard Times – The Triumph of Stoic Philosophy
  • Johannes Kepler, God, and the Solar System
  • Charles Babbage and the Vengeance of Organ-Grinders
  • Howard Robertson – the Man who Proved Einstein Wrong
  • Susskind, Alice, and Wave-Particle Gullibility




Alphabetical List of Scientists

Louis Agassiz | Maria Gaetana Agnesi | Al-BattaniAbu Nasr Al-Farabi | Alhazen | Jim Al-Khalili | Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi | Mihailo Petrovic Alas | Angel Alcala | Salim Ali | Luis Alvarez | Andre Marie Ampère | Anaximander | Carl Anderson | Mary Anning | Virginia Apgar | Archimedes | Agnes Arber | Aristarchus | Aristotle | Svante Arrhenius | Oswald Avery | Amedeo Avogadro | Avicenna

Charles Babbage | Francis Bacon | Alexander Bain | John Logie Baird | Joseph Banks | Ramon Barba | John Bardeen | Charles Barkla | Ibn Battuta | William Bayliss | George Beadle | Arnold Orville Beckman | Henri Becquerel | Emil Adolf Behring | Alexander Graham Bell | Emile Berliner | Claude Bernard | Timothy John Berners-Lee | Daniel Bernoulli | Jacob Berzelius | Henry Bessemer | Hans Bethe | Homi Jehangir Bhabha | Alfred Binet | Clarence Birdseye | Kristian Birkeland | James Black | Elizabeth Blackwell | Alfred Blalock | Katharine Burr Blodgett | Franz Boas | David Bohm | Aage Bohr | Niels Bohr | Ludwig Boltzmann | Max Born | Carl Bosch | Robert Bosch | Jagadish Chandra Bose | Satyendra Nath Bose | Walther Wilhelm Georg Bothe | Robert Boyle | Lawrence Bragg | Tycho Brahe | Brahmagupta | Hennig Brand | Georg Brandt | Wernher Von Braun | J Harlen Bretz | Louis de Broglie | Alexander Brongniart | Robert Brown | Michael E. Brown | Lester R. Brown | Eduard Buchner | Linda Buck | William Buckland | Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon | Robert Bunsen | Luther Burbank | Jocelyn Bell Burnell | Macfarlane Burnet | Thomas Burnet

Benjamin Cabrera | Santiago Ramon y Cajal | Rachel Carson | George Washington Carver | Henry Cavendish | Anders Celsius | James Chadwick | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | Erwin Chargaff | Noam Chomsky | Steven Chu | Leland Clark | John Cockcroft | Arthur Compton | Nicolaus Copernicus | Gerty Theresa Cori | Charles-Augustin de Coulomb | Jacques Cousteau | Brian Cox | Francis Crick | James Croll | Nicholas Culpeper | Marie Curie | Pierre Curie | Georges Cuvier | Adalbert Czerny

Gottlieb Daimler | John Dalton | James Dwight Dana | Charles Darwin | Humphry Davy | Peter Debye | Max Delbruck | Jean Andre Deluc | Democritus | René Descartes | Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel | Diophantus | Paul Dirac | Prokop Divis | Theodosius Dobzhansky | Frank Drake | K. Eric Drexler

John Eccles | Arthur Eddington | Thomas Edison | Paul Ehrlich | Albert Einstein | Gertrude Elion | Empedocles | Eratosthenes | Euclid | Eudoxus | Leonhard Euler

Michael Faraday | Pierre de Fermat | Enrico Fermi | Richard Feynman | Fibonacci – Leonardo of Pisa | Emil Fischer | Ronald Fisher | Alexander Fleming | John Ambrose Fleming | Howard Florey | Henry Ford | Lee De Forest | Dian Fossey | Leon Foucault | Benjamin Franklin | Rosalind Franklin | Sigmund Freud | Elizebeth Smith Friedman

Galen | Galileo Galilei | Francis Galton | Luigi Galvani | George Gamow | Martin Gardner | Carl Friedrich Gauss | Murray Gell-Mann | Sophie Germain | Willard Gibbs | William Gilbert | Sheldon Lee Glashow | Robert Goddard | Maria Goeppert-Mayer | Thomas Gold | Jane Goodall | Stephen Jay Gould | Otto von Guericke

Fritz Haber | Ernst Haeckel | Otto Hahn | Albrecht von Haller | Edmund Halley | Alister Hardy | Thomas Harriot | William Harvey | Stephen Hawking | Otto Haxel | Werner Heisenberg | Hermann von Helmholtz | Jan Baptist von Helmont | Joseph Henry | Caroline Herschel | John Herschel | William Herschel | Gustav Ludwig Hertz | Heinrich Hertz | Karl F. Herzfeld | George de Hevesy | Antony Hewish | David Hilbert | Maurice Hilleman | Hipparchus | Hippocrates | Shintaro Hirase | Dorothy Hodgkin | Robert Hooke | Frederick Gowland Hopkins | William Hopkins | Grace Murray Hopper | Frank Hornby | Jack Horner | Bernardo Houssay | Fred Hoyle | Edwin Hubble | Alexander von Humboldt | Zora Neale Hurston | James Hutton | Christiaan Huygens | Hypatia

Ernesto Illy | Jan Ingenhousz | Ernst Ising | Keisuke Ito

Mae Carol Jemison | Edward Jenner | J. Hans D. Jensen | Irene Joliot-Curie | James Prescott Joule | Percy Lavon Julian

Michio Kaku | Heike Kamerlingh Onnes | Pyotr Kapitsa | Friedrich August Kekulé | Frances Kelsey | Pearl Kendrick | Johannes Kepler | Abdul Qadeer Khan | Omar Khayyam | Alfred Kinsey | Gustav Kirchoff | Martin Klaproth | Robert Koch | Emil Kraepelin | Thomas Kuhn | Stephanie Kwolek

Joseph-Louis Lagrange | Jean-Baptiste Lamarck | Hedy Lamarr | Edwin Herbert Land | Karl Landsteiner | Pierre-Simon Laplace | Max von Laue | Antoine Lavoisier | Ernest Lawrence | Henrietta Leavitt | Antonie van Leeuwenhoek | Inge Lehmann | Gottfried Leibniz | Georges Lemaître | Leonardo da Vinci | Niccolo Leoniceno | Aldo Leopold | Rita Levi-Montalcini | Claude Levi-Strauss | Willard Frank Libby | Justus von Liebig | Carolus Linnaeus | Joseph Lister | John Locke | Hendrik Antoon Lorentz | Konrad Lorenz | Ada Lovelace | Percival Lowell | Lucretius | Charles Lyell | Trofim Lysenko

Ernst Mach | Marcello Malpighi | Jane Marcet | Guglielmo Marconi | Lynn Margulis | Barry Marshall | Polly Matzinger | Matthew Maury | James Clerk Maxwell | Ernst Mayr | Barbara McClintock | Lise Meitner | Gregor Mendel | Dmitri Mendeleev | Franz Mesmer | Antonio Meucci | John Michell | Albert Abraham Michelson | Thomas Midgeley Jr. | Milutin Milankovic | Maria Mitchell | Mario Molina | Thomas Hunt Morgan | Samuel Morse | Henry Moseley

Ukichiro Nakaya | John Napier | Giulio Natta | John Needham | John von Neumann | Thomas Newcomen | Isaac Newton | Charles Nicolle | Florence Nightingale | Tim Noakes | Alfred Nobel | Emmy Noether | Christiane Nusslein-Volhard | Bill Nye

Hans Christian Oersted | Georg Ohm | J. Robert Oppenheimer | Wilhelm Ostwald | William Oughtred

Blaise Pascal | Louis Pasteur | Wolfgang Ernst Pauli | Linus Pauling | Randy Pausch | Ivan Pavlov | Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin | Wilder Penfield | Marguerite Perey | William Perkin | John Philoponus | Jean Piaget | Philippe Pinel | Max Planck | Pliny the Elder | Henri Poincaré | Karl Popper | Beatrix Potter | Joseph Priestley | Proclus | Claudius Ptolemy | Pythagoras

Adolphe Quetelet | Harriet Quimby | Thabit ibn Qurra

C. V. Raman | Srinivasa Ramanujan | William Ramsay | John Ray | Prafulla Chandra Ray | Francesco Redi | Sally Ride | Bernhard Riemann | Wilhelm Röntgen | Hermann Rorschach | Ronald Ross | Ibn Rushd | Ernest Rutherford

Carl Sagan | Abdus Salam | Jonas Salk | Frederick Sanger | Alberto Santos-Dumont | Walter Schottky | Erwin Schrödinger | Theodor Schwann | Glenn Seaborg | Hans Selye | Charles Sherrington | Gene Shoemaker | Ernst Werner von Siemens | George Gaylord Simpson | B. F. Skinner | William Smith | Frederick Soddy | Mary Somerville | Arnold Sommerfeld | Hermann Staudinger | Nicolas Steno | Nettie Stevens | William John Swainson | Leo Szilard

Niccolo Tartaglia | Edward Teller | Nikola Tesla | Thales of Miletus | Theon of Alexandria | Benjamin Thompson | J. J. Thomson | William Thomson | Henry David Thoreau | Kip S. Thorne | Clyde Tombaugh | Susumu Tonegawa | Evangelista Torricelli | Charles Townes | Youyou Tu | Alan Turing | Neil deGrasse Tyson

Harold Urey

Craig Venter | Vladimir Vernadsky | Andreas Vesalius | Rudolf Virchow | Artturi Virtanen | Alessandro Volta

Selman Waksman | George Wald | Alfred Russel Wallace | John Wallis | Ernest Walton | James Watson | James Watt | Alfred Wegener | John Archibald Wheeler | Maurice Wilkins | Thomas Willis | E. O. Wilson | Sven Wingqvist | Sergei Winogradsky | Carl Woese | Friedrich Wöhler | Wilbur and Orville Wright | Wilhelm Wundt

Chen-Ning Yang

Ahmed Zewail

Return to top of page

Famous Scientists - Privacy - Contact - About - Content & Imagery © 2025