MedCat

Access to the MedCat database.

Archives consulted | For your information | About the records | How to cite | Legal notice

Id MedCat 

Archival sources | People

bib4385 (22 / November / 2024)

Darrera modificació: 2009-08-20
Bases de dades: Sciència.cat

Siraisi, Nancy G., Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine: An Introduction to Knowledge and Practice, Chicago-Londres, The University of Chicago Press, 1990, 264 pp.

Resum
A synthetic survey of medical learning and practice in Europe between the twelfth and the end of the fifteenth century, this splendid study is an indispensable, lucid, state-of-the-art introduction to a subject that lies close to the center of any consideration of Renaissance society and culture. Enlivened by a number of well chosen images, it illuminates not only contemporary assumptions about the functioning of the body and intellectual systems of disease and therapeutics but also the institutional and social structures within which those assumptions and systems were transmitted and put into practice. Siraisi has included chapters on the textual tradition of medical writing, practice and practitioners, medical education, anatomy and physiology, disease and treatment (including a fine discussion of pharmacology pharmacology), and surgeons and surgery. She has drawn not only on her own vast knowledge of academic medical writing and on a number of recent local studies by medical historians working from archival sources, but also (though to a lesser degree) on texts that illuminate more popular attitudes toward disease and healing: chronicles, letter collections, and--in many ways most interesting of all--canonization proceedings. The result comes as close to a total history of high medieval and early Renaissance medicine as is possible given the present state of research.

Contents:
* 1. The Formation of Western European Medicine
* 2. Practitioners and Conditions of Practice
* 3. Medical Education
* 4. Physiological and Anatomical Knowledge
* 5. Disease and Treatment
* 6. Surgeons and Surgery
* Epilogue: The Medical Renaissance
* Guide to Further Reading
* Selected Primary Sources Available in English Translation
Matèries
Història de la medicina
Notes
Fitxa de l'editor: http:/​/​www.press.uchicago.edu/​presssite/​metadata.ep ...
Recensions:
* Y. Violé O'Neill, al Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 46(2) (1991), 257-258.
What are the images?

The small images on the decorative ribbon correspond, from left to right, to the following documents: 1. James II orders the settlement of neighborhood disputes over an estate of the royal doctor Arnau de Vilanova in the city of Valencia. 1298 (ACA); 2. Contract between Guglielmo Neri de Santo Martino, a surgeon from Pisa, and the physician-surgeon from Majorca Pere Saflor, bachelor of medicine, to practise medicine and surgery under the latter’s direction, 1356 (ACM); 3. Valuation of the workshop of Guillem Metge, an apothecary from Barcelona, made by the apothecaries Miquel Tosell, Berenguer Duran and Vicenç Bonanat, for its sale to Llorenç Bassa, a fellow apothecary, 1364 (AHPB); 4. Peter III the Ceremonious regularizes the legal situation of Esteró, a Jewish female doctor from Vilafranca del Penedès, granting her an extraordinary license to practice medicine. 1384 (ACA); 5. Power of attorney of Margarida de Tornerons, a doctor in Prats de Molló and Vic, in order to recover the goods withheld from her by a third party in Vic, 1401 (ABEV); 6. Doctorate and teaching license of Narcís Solà, bachelor of medicine, issued by Bernat de Casaldòvol, doctor of medicine and chancellor of the Faculty of Medicine in Barcelona, 1526 (AHCB); and 7. Partnership between Joan Llunes and Joan Francesc Llunes, father and son, and Lluís Gual, the former’s son-in-law, surgeons of Caldes de Montbui, in order to practise the profession, 1579 (AHCB).