Bacteriology · 1882

Robert Koch

The German physician who gave the consumption a face beneath the lens.

1843–1910Clausthal, 1843Baden-Baden, 1910

Where Pasteur reasoned, Koch isolated. Working from a makeshift home laboratory, he developed the methods — solid culture media, staining, photography — by which a single species of microbe could be grown pure and shown to cause a single disease.

In 1882 he identified the bacillus of tuberculosis, then the agent of cholera. His four postulates remain the logic by which a germ is convicted of the malady it makes.