- of
physicians Jakob Heine in 1840 and Karl
Oskar Medin in 1890 led to it
being known as Heine–
Medin disease. The
disease was
later called infantile paralysis...
-
multiple invasions of his
country that
Mediņš left
Latvia in 1944,
eventually settling for good in Sweden. Jānis
Mediņš's memoir Toņi un pustoņi (‘Tones and...
-
Swedish pediatrician Mykola Medin (born 1972),
Ukrainian football coach and a
former player Medina (surname) Jānis
Mediņš (1890–1966),
Latvian composer...
-
Medin or
MEDIN may
refer to
Medin (name) the
Marine Environmental Data and
Information Network Medin, a
district of Damascus:
possibly this is Al-Midan...
- Kaj
Joakim Medin, (born 28
August 1984) is a
Swedish journalist and writer. In 2016,
Medin wrote the book Kobane: den
kurdiska revolutionen och kampen...
-
Harriet White Medin (March 14, 1914 – May 20, 2005) was an
American actress and
dialogue coach who
worked in
Italian and
American films. She appeared...
-
Frieda Medín (born 1949, San Juan,
Puerto Rico) is a
Puerto Rican artist. She
works in photography, film making,
experimental cinema and installations...
- Tomo
Medin, also
known as
count Tommaso Medini (1725–1788) was a
Montenegrin Serb
adventurer and author,
translator of Voltaire's
Henriade into Italian...
-
MedinTux is a free
healthcare software for
managing consultations,
written for the
French environment.
Originally written for the
French emergency services...
-
district in
Stockholm from 1907 to 1909. As a
pupil of
pediatrician Karl
Oskar Medin, whom he held in high esteem,
Wickman predominantly devoted himself to the...