Born - 14 November 1891
Died - 10 April 1949
Achievements - Birbal Sahni was a renowned paleobotanist and
geologist of India. He is Sahni is credited for setting up the Birbal
Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany at Lucknow in the state of Uttar
Pradesh. In the year 1929, he received the degree of Sc. D. from the
University of Cambridge. He was also appointed the Fellow of the Royal
Society of London (FRS) in the year 1936, which is the biggest British
scientific honor.
Birbal Sahni was a renowned paleobotanist of India, who studied the
fossils of the Indian subcontinent. Also a great geologist, Sahni is
credited for establishing the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany at
Lucknow in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Born on 14 November in the year
1891 at Behra in the Saharanpur District of West Punjab, Birbal was the
third son of Ishwar Devi and Prof. Ruchi Ram Sahni. Some famous
personalities who were regular guests of his parents were Motilal Nehru,
Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Sarojini Naidu and others.
Read on further about the biography of Birbal Sahni, who received his
education at the Government College University of Lahore and later from
Punjab University. He attended the Emmanuel College at Cambridge in the
year 1914. And after this, he pursued further studies under Professor
A.C. Seward and was given the D.Sc. degree from London University in the
year 1919. Birbal Sahni then came back to his native country India to
work as the professor of Botany at the highly esteemed Banaras Hindu
University at the holy city of Varanasi.
Sahni also taught at the Punjab University for about a year. Birbal
Sahni's academic background was so strong that he was elected the head
of the botany department in Lucknow University in the year 1921. There
were numerous such landmarks in the life history of Birbal Sahni, whose
fabulous research work was honored by the University of Cambridge that
decided to present him with the degree of Sc. D. in the year 1929. In
the coming time, Sahni not only continued his own study, but also
appointed and guided a number of bright students under him.
He holds the credit of establishing the Paleobotanical Society that
went on to set up the Institute of Palaeobotany on 10 September 1946.
Professor Sahni was respected by all academicians and scholars of his
time both in India and abroad. He was appointed the Fellow of the Royal
Society of London (FRS) in the year 1936, which is the biggest British
scientific honor. And for the first time since its inception, this award
was given out to an Indian botanist.
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