Gregor Mendel
Gregor Johann Mendel (1822 nî 7 goe̍h 20[2] – 1884 nî 1 goe̍h 6 hō) sī Ò-tē-lī Tè-kok ê sîn-hū kap kho-ha̍k-ka, I gián-kiù hôe-liân-tāu (Pisum sativum) ê cha̍p-chéng, chéng-lí chhut kok-chióng sèng-chit (trait) ê ûi-thôan kui-lu̍t, kiàn-li̍p liáu āu-lâi lâng hoat-tián hiān-tāi ûi-thôan-ha̍k ê ki-chhó͘.
The Right Reverend Gregor Mendel OSA | |
---|---|
Chhut-sì | Johann Mendel 1822 nî 7 goe̍h 20 ji̍t Heinzendorf bei Odrau, Silesia, Austrian Empire |
Koè-sin | 1884 nî 1 goe̍h 6 ji̍t (61 hòe) Brünn, Moravia, Austria-Hungary (now Brno, Czech Republic) |
Kok-che̍k | Austrian |
Bú-hāu | University of Olmütz University of Vienna |
Tù-miâ | Creating the science of genetics |
Kho-ha̍k sing-gâi | |
Gén-kiù líng-i̍k | Genetics |
Jīm-tsit ki-kòo | St Thomas's Abbey |
Ecclesiastical career | |
Religion | Christianity |
Church | Catholic Church |
Ordained | 25 December 1846[1] |
Mendel tī Ò-tē-lī Tè-kok ê Heinzendorf (hiān-sî sio̍k Česko) chhut-sì, 1851 nî kàu 1853 nî tī Wien Tāi-ha̍k ha̍k-si̍p. Sui-jiân Mendel tùi hôe-liân-tāu ê gián-kiù sī tī 1856 nî kàu 1863 nî chi kan; chóng-sī hit chūn ia̍h bô chin liû-hêng, sī kàu 20 sè-kí chho͘-kî khah tī kî-thaⁿ kho-ha̍k-ka têng-sin hoat-tián kap gī-lūn chi hā khah sán-seng chhut hiān-tāi ê ûi-thoân-ha̍k.
Chá-liân
Mendel sī tī 1822 nî 7 goe̍h 20 ùi Moravia chhut-sì, chhut-sin lông-bîn ka-têng. Mendel hèng-chhù tī lông-ha̍k kap phok-bu̍t-ha̍k, i āu-bóe khì Olomouc Tāi-ha̍k tha̍k-chheh[3].