The document provides a detailed history of the development of Germ Theory, from its earliest concepts in ancient Greece to its establishment in the late 19th century. Some key points include: Hippocrates' idea in 500 BC that disease originated from stagnant water; Anton van Leeuwenhoek's discovery of microbes in the 1670s; Ignaz Semmelweis' findings in 1847 linking childbed fever to doctors transferring germs; Louis Pasteur's experiments in the 1860s disproving spontaneous generation and establishing that different microbes have different effects; and Robert Koch's four postulates in the 1880s providing criteria for scientifically proving that a specific microbe causes a specific disease. The work of