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Elias von Cyon, also known as Elie de Cyon, born Ilya Fadeyevich Tsion (Russian- Илья Фаддеевич Цион); (March 25, 1843 – 1912) was a Russian-French physiologist born to Jewish parents in Telšiai, Russian Empire (today Lithuania). His father was a Cantonist. His name is associated with "Cyon's nerve" (aortic nerve), which is a branch of the vagus nerve that terminates in the aortic arch and base of the heart. It is composed entirely of afferent fibers. He converted to Catholicism in 1908 and is claimed to have written parts of The Protocols of Zion.

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  • أيلي دي سيون (ar)
  • Elias von Cyon (de)
  • Elias von Cyon (en)
  • Élie de Cyon (fr)
  • Ilja Cyon (pl)
  • Цион, Илья Фаддеевич (ru)
  • Ілля Ціон (uk)
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  • ولد 25 مارس 1843م في تيلسياي محافظة كاوناس في ليتوانيا بروسيا وتوفي في نوفمبر 1912م بباريس، كان طبيبا وفيسيولوجيا وصحفيا وكاتب مقالات. Élie de Cyon (ar)
  • Elias von Cyon (Ilya Faddeyewitsch Tsion, Élie de Cyon) (* 25. März 1843 in Telšiai, Gouvernement Kowno, Russisches Kaiserreich; † 23. Oktober 1912 in Paris) war ein Physiologe und Schriftsteller. (de)
  • Élie de Cyon (en russe Ilia Fadeïevitch Tsion, également germanisé en Elias von Cyon) né le 25 mars 1843 à Telsch, dans le Gouvernement de Kowno de l'empire russe, et mort en novembre 1912 à Paris, est un médecin, physiologiste, journaliste et essayiste russe. (fr)
  • Ilja Faddiejewicz Cyon, także Elias von Cyon, Élie de Cyon, ros. Илья Фаддеевич Цион (ur. 13 marca?/ 25 marca 1843 w Telszach, zm. 23 października 1912 w Paryżu) – rosyjsko-francuski lekarz, fizjolog, działacz polityczny, profesor na Uniwersytecie w Sankt Petersburgu. (pl)
  • Илья Фаддеевич Цион, известный также под именем Elie de Cyon (13 (25) марта 1842, Тельши, Ковенская губерния, Российская империя — 5 ноября 1912, Париж, Франция) — русский и французский физиолог, доктор медицинских наук, профессор, агент Министерства финансов России во Франции, международный авантюрист и финансовый махинатор, российский и французский журналист, публицист, автор полемических политических и экономических сочинений, еврей, один из предполагаемых фабрикаторов «Протоколов сионских мудрецов». (ru)
  • Elias von Cyon, also known as Elie de Cyon, born Ilya Fadeyevich Tsion (Russian- Илья Фаддеевич Цион); (March 25, 1843 – 1912) was a Russian-French physiologist born to Jewish parents in Telšiai, Russian Empire (today Lithuania). His father was a Cantonist. His name is associated with "Cyon's nerve" (aortic nerve), which is a branch of the vagus nerve that terminates in the aortic arch and base of the heart. It is composed entirely of afferent fibers. He converted to Catholicism in 1908 and is claimed to have written parts of The Protocols of Zion. (en)
  • Ілля Фаддейович Ціон (1842—1912) — фізіолог. Народився в Тельшяї, в сьогоднішній Литві. У 1864 році закінчив Берлінський університет. На початку 1870-х років був професором і Медично-хірургічної академії. Високі оцінки колег-сучасників одержали праці Ціона з фізіології кровообігу і нервової системи людини. (uk)
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  • ولد 25 مارس 1843م في تيلسياي محافظة كاوناس في ليتوانيا بروسيا وتوفي في نوفمبر 1912م بباريس، كان طبيبا وفيسيولوجيا وصحفيا وكاتب مقالات. Élie de Cyon (ar)
  • Elias von Cyon (Ilya Faddeyewitsch Tsion, Élie de Cyon) (* 25. März 1843 in Telšiai, Gouvernement Kowno, Russisches Kaiserreich; † 23. Oktober 1912 in Paris) war ein Physiologe und Schriftsteller. (de)
  • Elias von Cyon, also known as Elie de Cyon, born Ilya Fadeyevich Tsion (Russian- Илья Фаддеевич Цион); (March 25, 1843 – 1912) was a Russian-French physiologist born to Jewish parents in Telšiai, Russian Empire (today Lithuania). His father was a Cantonist. Son of Pinkhos (Faddey) Cyon and his wife Sarah; he had an elder brother Moses (born 1840). Cyon studied medicine at the medical-surgical academy in Warsaw, at the University of Kyiv and in Berlin. He obtained a degree in medicine in Kyiv in 1864. In 1866 he worked in Leipzig as an assistant to Carl Ludwig (1816–1895), with whom he collaborated on creation of the first isolated perfused frog heart preparation. From 1867 he taught classes on anatomy and physiology at the University of St. Petersburg, where he was assistant to the director of the physiology laboratory, Filipp Ovsyannikov. At St. Petersburg one of his students was Ivan Pavlov (1849–1936). In 1870 he became an associate professor, and following student protests concerning his political views, he relocated to Paris in 1877. In Paris he attained French citizenship and worked with famed physiologist Claude Bernard (1813–1881). His name is associated with "Cyon's nerve" (aortic nerve), which is a branch of the vagus nerve that terminates in the aortic arch and base of the heart. It is composed entirely of afferent fibers. He converted to Catholicism in 1908 and is claimed to have written parts of The Protocols of Zion. (en)
  • Élie de Cyon (en russe Ilia Fadeïevitch Tsion, également germanisé en Elias von Cyon) né le 25 mars 1843 à Telsch, dans le Gouvernement de Kowno de l'empire russe, et mort en novembre 1912 à Paris, est un médecin, physiologiste, journaliste et essayiste russe. (fr)
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