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See also:HISTORY OF See also:ANATOMY 1 In tracing the history of the origin of anatomy, it may be justly said that more learning than See also:judgment has been displayed. Some writers claim for it the highest antiquity, and pretend to find its first rudiments alternately in the See also:animal sacrifices of the shepherd See also:kings, the See also:Jews and other See also:ancient nations, and in the See also:art of See also:embalming as practised by the See also:Egyptian priests.' Even the descriptions of wounds in the Iliad have been supposed adequate to prove that in the See also:time of See also:Homer mankind had distinct notions of the structure of the human See also:body. Of the first it may be said that the See also:rude See also:information obtained by the slaughter of animals for See also:sacrifice does not imply profound anatomical knowledge; and those who adduce the second as See also:evidence are deceived by the See also:language of the poet of the Trojan See also:War, which, distinguishing certain parts by their See also:ordinary See also:Greek epithets, as afterwards used by See also:Hippocrates, See also:Galen and all anatomists, has been rather too easily supposed to prove that the poet had studied systematically the structure of the human See also:frame. With not much greater See also:justice has the cultivation of anatomical knowledge been ascribed to Hippocrates, who, because he is universally allowed to be the See also:father of See also:medicine, has also been thought to be the creator of the See also:science of anatomy. Of 1 The See also:article in the 9th edition of this See also:Encyclopaedia, dealing with the history of anatomy, and written by the See also:late Dr See also:Craigie of See also:Edinburgh, has gained such a just reputation as the classical See also:work on the subject in the See also:English language that it is substantially reproduced. Here and there points of See also:special or See also:biographical See also:interest are See also:drawn See also:attention to in the shape of footnotes, but any reader interested in the subject would do well to consult, with this article, the work of R. R. von Toply, Studien zur Geschichte der Anatomie See also:im Mitlelalter (See also:Leipzig, 1898). In addition to this See also:Professor A. Macalister has published a See also:series of articles, under the See also:head of " Archaeologia Anatomica," in the See also:Journal of Anatomy and See also:Physiology. These are written from a structural rather than a See also:bibliographical point of view, and will be found under the following headings: " See also:Atlas and Epistropheus," J. Anat. vol. xxxiii. p. 204; " See also:Veins of Forearm," vol. xxxiii. p. 343; " Poupart's See also:Ligament," vol. xxxiii. p..193 ; " Tendo-Achillis," vol. xxxiii. p. 676; " Parotid," vol. See also:xxxv. p. 117; " Trochanter," vol. xxxv. p. 269. 2 The See also:oldest anatomical See also:treatise extant is an Egyptian See also:papyrus probably written sixteen centuries before our era. It shows that the See also:heart, vessels. See also:liver, See also:spleen, kidneys, ureters and See also:bladder were recognized, and that the See also:blood-vessels were known to come from the heart. Other vessels are described, some carrying See also:air, some mucus, while two to the right See also:ear are said to carry the breath of See also:life, and two to the See also:left ear the breath of See also:death. See A. Macalister, " Archaeologia Anatomica," J. Anat. and Phys. vol. xxxii. p. 775. But see also the article See also:OMEN.the seven individuals of the See also:family of the Heracleidae who See also:bore this celebrated name, the second, who was the son of Heraclides and Phenarita, and See also:grandson of the first Hippocrates, was indeed distinguished as a physician of See also:great observation and experience, and the first who appreciated the value of studying accurately the phenomena, effects and terminations of disease. It does not appear, however, notwithstanding the vague and See also:general panegyrics of J. Riolan, Bartholin, D. le Clerc, and A. Portal, that the anatomical know-ledge of this illustrious See also:person was either accurate or profound. Of the See also:works ascribed to Hippocrates, five only are genuine. Most of them were written either by subsequent authors of the same name, or by one or other of the numerous impostors who took See also:advantage of the zealous munificence of the See also:Ptolemies, by fabricating works under that illustrious name. Of the few which are genuine, there is none expressly devoted to anatomy; and of his knowledge on this subject the only proofs are to be found in the exposition of his physiological opinions, and his medical or surgical instructions. From these it appears that Hippocrates had some accurate notions on See also:osteology, but that of the structure of the human body in general his ideas were at once superficial and erroneous. In his See also:book on injuries of the head, and in that on fractures, he shows that he knew the sutures of the cranium and the relative situation of the bones, and that he had some notion of the shape of the bones in general and of their mutual connexions. Of the muscles, of the soft parts in general, and of the See also:internal See also:organs, his ideas are confused, indistinct and erroneous. The See also:term 4,Mi/i he seems, in See also:imitation of the colloquial Greek, to have used generally to signify a blood-See also:vessel, without being aware of the distinction of vein and artery; and the term o.pmpi-a, or air-holder, is restricted to the See also:windpipe. He appears to have been unaware of the existence of the See also:nervous chords; and the term See also:nerve is used by him, as by Grecian authors in general, to signify a See also:sinew or tendon. On other points his views are so much combined with See also:peculiar physiological doctrines, that it is impossible to assign them the See also:character of anatomical facts; and even the works in which these doctrines are contained are with little See also:probability to be ascribed to the second Hippocrates. If, however, we overlook this difficulty, and admit what is contained in the genuine Hippocratic writings to represent at least the sum of knowledge possessed by Hippocrates and his immediate descendants, we find that he represents the See also:brain as a gland, from which exudes a viscid fluid; that the heart is See also:muscular and of pyramidal shape, and has two ventricles separated by a See also:partition, the fountains of life—and two auricles, receptacles of air; that the lungs consist of five ash-coloured lobes, the substance of which is cellular and spongy, naturally dry, but refreshed by the air; and that the kidneys are glands, but possess an attractive See also:faculty, by virtue of which the moisture of the drink is separated and descends into the bladder. He distinguishes the bowels into See also:colon and rectum (6 apxos). The knowledge possessed by the second Hippocrates was transmitted in various degrees of purity to the descendants and pupils, chiefly of the family of the Heracleidae, who succeeded him. Several of these, with feelings of grateful See also:affection, appear to have studied to preserve the written memory of his instructions, and in this manner to have contributed to See also:form See also:part of that collection of See also:treatises which have See also:long been known to the learned See also:world under the general name of the Hippocratic writings. Though composed, like the genuine remains of the physician of See also:Cos, in the Ionian See also:dialect, all of them differ from these in being more diffuse in See also:style, more elaborate in form, and in studying to invest their anatomical and medical See also:matter with the fanciful ornaments of the Platonic See also:philosophy. Hippocrates had the merit of See also:early recognizing the value of facts apart from opinions, and of those facts especially which See also:lead to general results; and in the few genuine writings which are now extant it is easy to perceive that he has recourse to the simplest language, expresses himself in terms which, though See also:short and pithy, are always precise and perspicuous, and is averse to the introduction of philosophical dogmas. Of the greater part of the writings collected under his name, on the contrary the general character Nervous See also:system. Nerve. Olfactory system. Pharynx. See also:Pancreas. See also:Placenta. Reproductive system. See also:Respiratory system. See also:Skeleton. Skin and Exoskeleton. See also:Skull. See also:Spinal See also:cord. See also:Teeth. See also:Tongue. Urinary system. Vascular system. Veins. See also:Hippo-See also:crates. is verboseness, prolixity and a great tendency to speculative opinions. For these reasons, as well as for others derived from internal evidence, while the Aphorisms, the Epidemics and the works above mentioned, See also:bear distinct marks of being the genuine remains of Hippocrates, it is impossible to regard the book IIEpi (glows avOpciirov as entirely the See also:composition of that physician; and it appears more reasonable to view it as the work of some one of the numerous disciples to whom the author had communicated the results of his observation, which they unwisely attempted to combine with the philosophy of the Platonic school and their own mysterious opinions. Among those who aimed at this distinction, the most fortunate in the preservation of his name is Polybus, the son-in-See also:law of the Polynus. physician of Cos. This person, who must not be confounded with the monarch of See also:Corinth, immortalized by See also:Sophocles in the tragic See also:story of See also:Oedipus, is represented as a recluse, severed from the world and its enjoyments, and devoting himself to the study of anatomy and physiology, and to the composition of works on these subjects. To him has been ascribed the whole of the book on the Nature of the See also:Child and most of that On See also:Man; both physiological treatises interspersed with anatomical sketches. His anatomical information, with which we are specially concerned, appears to have been rude and inaccurate, like that of his See also:preceptor. He represents the large vessels of the body as consisting of four pairs; the first proceeding from the head by the back of the See also:neck and spinal cord to the hips, See also:lower extremities and See also:outer See also:ankle; the second, consisting of the jugular vessels (at v4aytre5es), proceeding to the loins, thighs, hams and inner ankle; the third proceeding from the temples by the neck to the scapula and lungs, and thence by mutual intercrossings to the spleen and left See also:kidney, and the liver and right kidney, and finally to the rectum; and the See also:fourth from the fore-part of the neck to the upper extremities, the fore-part of the See also:trunk, and the organs of See also:generation. This specimen of the anatomical knowledge of one of he most illustrious of the Hippocratic disciples differs not essentially from that of Syennesis, the physician of See also:Cyprus, and See also:Diogenes, the philosopher of See also:Apollonia, two authors for the preservation of whose opinions we are indebted to See also:Aristotle. They may be admitted as representing the See also:state of anatomical knowledge among the most enlightened men at that time, and they only show how rude and erroneous were their ideas on the structure of the animal body. It may indeed, without injustice, be said that the anatomy of the Hippocratic school is not only erroneous, but fanciful and imaginary in often substituting See also:mere supposition and assertion for what ought to be matter of fact. From this censure it is impossible to exempt even the name of See also:Plato himself, for whom some notices in the See also:Timaeus on the structure of the animal body, as taught by Hippocrates and Polybus, have See also:pro-cured a See also:place in the history of the science. Amidst the general obscurity in which the early history of anatomy is involved, only two leading facts may be admitted Aristotle.
with certainty. The first is, that previous to the time
of Aristotle there was no accurate knowledge of
anatomy; and the second, that all that was known was derived
from the See also:dissection of the lower animals only. By the See also:appearance
of Aristotle this See also:species of knowledge, which was hitherto
acquired in a desultory and irregular manner, began to be
cultivated systematically and with a definite See also:object ; and
among the services which the philosopher of Stagira rendered
to mankind, one of the greatest and most substantial is, that he
was the founder of See also:Comparative Anatomy, and was the first to
apply its facts to the elucidation of See also:zoology. The works of this
ardent and See also:original naturalist show that his zootomical know-
ledge was extensive and often accurate; and from several of his
descriptions it is impossible to doubt that they were derived
from frequent See also:personal dissection. Aristotle, who was See also:born 384
years before the See also:Christian era, or in the first See also:year of the 99th
See also:Olympiad, was at the See also:age of See also:thirty-nine requested by See also: He also distinguishes the thick, See also:firm and more tendinous structure of the aorta from the thin and membranous structure of vein. In describing the See also:distribution of the latter, however, he confounds the vena cava and pulmonary artery, and, as might be expected, he confounds the ramifications of the former with those of the arterial tubes in general. While he represents the See also:lung to be liberally supplied with blood, he describes the brain as an See also:organ almost destitute of this fluid. His See also:account of the distribution of the aorta is wonderfully correct. Though he does not See also:notice the coeliac, and remarks that the aorta sends no See also:direct branches to the liver and spleen, he had observed the mesenteric, the renal and the See also:common iliac See also:arteries. It is nevertheless singular that though he remarks particularly that the renal branches of the aorta go to the substance and not the See also:pelvis (KoiXla) of the kidney, he appears to See also:mistake the ureters for branches of the aorta. Of the nerves (veupa) he appears to have the most confused notions. Making them arise from the heart, which he says has nerves (tendons) in its largest cavity, he represents the aorta to be a nervous or tendinous vein (vevpAns OW. By and by, afterwards saying that all the articulated bones are connected by nerves, he makes them the same as ligaments. He distinguishes the windpipe or air-holder (aprrtpla) from the See also:oesophagus, because it is placed before the latter, because See also:food or drink passing into it causes distressing cough and suffocation, and because there is no passage from the lung to the See also:stomach. He knew the situation and use of the epiglottis, seems to have had some indistinct notions of the larynx, represents the windpipe to be necessary to convey air to and from the lungs, and appears to have a tolerable understanding of the structure of the lungs. He repeatedly represents the heart, the shape and site of which he describes accurately, to be the origin of the blood-vessels, in opposition to those who made them descend from the head; yet, though he represents it as full of blood and the source and See also:fountain of that fluid, and even speaks of the blood flowing from the heart to the veins, and thence to every part of the body, he say: nothing of the circular See also:motion of the blood. The See also:diaphragm he distinguishes by the name &aNµa, and umr5 'cepa. With the liver and spleen, and the whole alimentary canal, he seems well acquainted. The several parts of the quadruple stomach of the ruminating animals are distinguished and named; and he even traces the relations between the teeth and the several forms of stomach, and the length or brevity, the simplicity or complication of the intestinal See also:tube. Upon the same principle he distinguishes the jejunum (ij PiO'TCS), or the empty portion of the small intestines in animals (rd EPTEpov Xe rTOv), the caecum (See also:roc/A& n Kai ey,ce6e ), the colon (TO K& Xov), and the sigmoid flexure (UTEvc repov Kai eiXty s vov). The See also:modern epithet of rectum is the literal See also:translation of his description of the straight progress (EVBu) of the bowel to the anus (Trpwicrbr). He knew the nasal cavities and the passage from the tympanal cavity of the ear to the See also:palate, afterwards described by B. Eustachius. He distinguishes as -" partes similares " those structures, such as See also:bone, See also:cartilage, vessels, sinews, blood, See also:lymph, See also:fat, flesh, which, not confined to one locality, but distributed throughout the body generally, we now term the tissues or textures, whilst he applies the term " partes dissimilares " to the regions of the head, neck, trunk and extremities. Next to Aristotle occur the names of Diodes of Carystus and Praxagoras of Cos, the last of the family of the Asclepiadae. The latter is remarkable for being the first who distinguished the arteries from the veins, and the author of the See also:opinion that the former were air-vessels. Hitherto anatomical inquiry was confined to the examination of the bodies of See also:brute animals. We have, indeed, no testimony of the human body being submitted to examination previous Aleraa- to the time of Erasistratus and Herophilus; and it is &Ian school. vain to look for See also:authentic facts on this point before the See also:foundation of the Ptolemaic See also:dynasty of sovereigns in See also:Egypt. This event, which, as is generally known, succeeded the death of Alexander, 320 years before the Christian era, collected into one spot the scattered embers of literature and science, which were beginning to languish in Greece under a weak and distracted See also:government and an unsettled state of society. The See also:children of her divided states, whom domestic discord and the uncertainties of war rendered unhappy at See also:home, wandered into Egypt, and found, under the fostering See also:hand of the Alexandrian monarchs, the means of cultivating the sciences, and repaying with interest to the See also:country of See also:Thoth and See also:Osiris the benefits which had been conferred on the See also:infancy of Greece by Thales and See also:Pythagoras. See also:Alexandria became in this manner the repository of all the learning and knowledge of the civilized world; and while other nations were sinking under the effects of internal animosities and mutual dissensions, or ravaging the See also:earth with the evils of war, the Egyptian Greeks kept alive the sacred See also:flame of science, and preserved mankind from relapsing into their original barbarism. These happy effects are to be ascribed in an eminent degree to the enlightened government and liberal opinions of See also:Ptolemy See also:Soter, and his immediate successors Philadelphus and Euergetes. The two latter princes, whose authority was equalled only by the zeal with which they patronized science and its professors, were the first who enabled physicians to dissect the human body, and prevented the prejudices of See also:ignorance and superstition from compromising the welfare of the human See also:race. To this happy circumstance Herophilus and Erasistratus are indebted for the distinction of being known to posterity as the first anatomists who dissected and described the parts of the human body. Both these physicians flourished under Ptolemy Soter, and probably Ptolemy Philadelphus, and were indeed the See also:principal supports of what has been named in medical history the Alexandrian School, to which their reputation seems to have attracted numerous pupils. But though the concurrent testimony of antiquity assigns to these physicians the merit of dissecting the human body, time, which See also:wages endless war with the vanity and ambition of man, has dealt hardly with the monuments of their labours. As the works of neither have been preserved, great uncertainty prevails as to the respective merits of these ancient anatomists; and all that is now known of their anatomical researches is obtained from the occasional notices of Galen, Oribasius and some other writers. From these it appears that Erasistratus recognized the valves of the heart, Erasls- and distinguished them by the names of tricuspid and &sum. sigmoid; that he studied particularly the shape and structure of the brain, and its divisions, and cavities, and membranes, and likened the convolutions to the folds of the jejunum; that he first formed a distinct See also:idea of the nature of the nerves, which he made issue from the brain; and that he discovered lymphatic vessels in the mesentery, first in brute animals, and afterwards, it is said, in man. He appears also tohave distinguished the nerves into those of sensation and those of motion. Of Herophilus it is said that he had extensive anatomical knowledge, acquired by dissecting not only brutes but human bodies. Of these he probably dissected more than any of his predecessors or contemporaries. Devoted to the assiduous cultivation of anatomy, he appears to have studied with particular attention those parts which were least understood. He recognized the nature of the pulmonary artery, which he denominates arterious vein; he knew the vessels of the mesentery, and showed that they did not go to the vena Aortae, but to certain glandular bodies; and he first applied the name of twelve-See also:inch or duodenum (SmSEKaSaKrvXor) to that part of the alimentary canal which is next to the stomach. Like Erasistratus, he appears to have studied carefully the configuration of the brain; and though, like him, he distinguishes the nerves into those of sensation and those of voluntary motion, he adds to them the ligaments and tendons. A tolerable description of the liver by this anatomist is preserved in the writings of Galen. He first applied the name of choroid or vascular membrane to that which is found in the cerebral ventricles; he knew the straight venous sinus which still bears his name; and to him the linear furrow at the bottom of the fourth ventricle is indebted for its name of calamus scriptorius. The celebrity of these two great anatomists appears to have thrown into the shade for a long period the names of all other inquirers; for, among their numerous and rather celebrated successors in the Alexandrian school, it is impossible to recognize a name which is entitled to distinction in the history of anatomy. In a chasm so wide it is not uninteresting to find, in one who combined the characters of the greatest orator and philosopher of See also:Rome, the most distinct traces of attention to anatomical knowledge. See also:Cicero, in his treatise De Natura Deorum, in a short See also:sketch of physiology, such as it was taught by Aristotle and his disciples, introduces various anatomical notices, from which the classical reader may form some idea of the state of anatomy at that time. The See also:Roman orator appears to have formed a See also:pretty distinct idea of the shape and connexions of the windpipe and lungs; and though he informs his readers that he knows the alimentary canal, he omits the details through motives of delicacy. In imitation of Aristotle, he talks of the blood being conveyed by the veins (venae) , that is, blood-vessels, through the body at large; and, like Praxagoras, of the air inhaled by the lungs being conveyed through the arteries. Aretaeus, though chiefly known as a medical author, makes some observations on the lung and the pleura, maintains the glandular structure of the kidney, and describes the anastomoses or communications of the capillary extremities of the veins cava with those of the portal vein. The most valuable depository of the anatomical knowledge of these times is the work of See also:Celsus, one of the most judicious medical authors of antiquity. He left, indeed, no Celsus. See also:express anatomical treatise; but from the introductions to the 4th and 8th books of his work, De Medicine, with incidental remarks in the 7th, the modern reader may form very just ideas of his anatomical attainments. From these it appears that Celsus was well acquainted with the windpipe and lungs and the heart; with the difference between the windpipe and oesophagus (stomachus), which leads to the stomach (ventriculus); and with the shape, situation and relations of the diaphragm. He enumerates also the principal facts See also:relating to the situation of the liver, the spleen, the kidneys and the stomach. He appears, however, to have been unaware of the distinction of duodenum or twelve-inch bowel, already admitted by Herophilus, and represents the stomach as directly connected by means of the pylorus with the jejunum or upper part of the small See also:intestine. The 7th and 8th books, which are devoted to the See also:consideration of those diseases which are treated by See also:manual operation, contain sundry anatomical notices necessary to explain the nature of the diseases or mode of treatment. Of these, indeed, the merit is unequal; and it is not wonderful that the ignorance of the See also:day prevented Celsus from understanding rightly the mechanism of HerophIlus. the See also:pathology of See also:hernia. He appears, however, to have formed a tolerably just idea of the mode of cutting into the urinary bladder; and even his obstetrical instructions show that his 'knowledge of the uterus, vagina and appendages was not contemptible. It is in osteology, however, that the information of Celsus is chiefly conspicuous. He enumerates the sutures and several of the holes of the cranium, and describes at great length the See also:superior and inferior maxillary bones and the teeth. With a See also:good See also:deal of care he describes the vertebrae and the ribs, and gives very briefly the situation and shape of the scapula, humerus, See also:radius and ulna, and even of the carpal and metacarpal bones, and then of the different bones of the pelvis and lower extremities. He had formed a just idea of the articular connexions, and is desirous to impress the fact that none is formed without cartilage. From his mention of many See also:minute holes (multa et tenuia foramina) in the See also:recess of the nasal cavities, it is evident that he was acquainted with the perforated See also:plate of the ethmoid bone; and from saying that the straight part of the auditory canal becomes flexuous and terminates in numerous minute cavities (multa et tenuia foramina diducitur), it is inferred by Portal that he knew the semicircular canals. Though the writings of Celsus show that he cultivated anatomical knowledge, it does not appear that the science was much studied by the See also:Romans; and there is See also:reason to believe that, after the decay of the school of Alexandria, it languished in neglect and obscurity. It is at least certain that the appearance of See also:Marinus during the reign of See also:Nero is mentioned by authors as an era remarkable for anatomical inquiry, and that this person is distinguished by Galen as the restorer of a See also:branch of knowledge which had been before him suffered to fall into undeserved neglect. From Galen also we learn that Marinus gave an accurate account of the muscles, that he studied particularly the glands, and that he discovered those of the mesentery. He fixed the number of nerves at seven; he observed the See also:palatine nerves, which he rated as the fourth pair; and described as the fifth the auditory and facial, which he regards as one pair, and the hypoglossal as the See also:sixth. Not long after Marinus appeared See also:Rufus (or Ruffus) of See also:Ephesus, a Greek physician, who in the reign of See also:Trajan was much attached Rufus. to physiology, and as a means of cultivating this science studied Comparative Anatomy and made sundry experiments on living animals. Of the anatomical writings of this author there remains only a See also:list or See also:catalogue of names of different regions and parts of the animal body. He appears, however, to have directed attention particularly to the tortuous course of the uterine vessels, and to have recognized even at this early period the Fallopian tube. He distinguishes the nerves into those of sensation and those of motion. He knew the re-current nerve. His name is further associated with the ancient experiment of compressing in the situation of the See also:carotid arteries the pneumogastric nerve, and thereby inducing insensibility and loss of See also:voice. Of all the authors of antiquity, however, none possesses so just a claim to the See also:title of anatomist as See also:Claudius Galenus, the Galen. celebrated physician of See also:Pergamum, who was born about the i3oth year of the Christian era, and lived under the reigns of See also:Hadrian, the Antonines, See also:Commodus and See also:Severus. He was trained by his father Nicon (whose memory he embalms as an eminent mathematician, architect and astronomer) in all the learning of the day, and initiated particularly into the mysteries of the Aristotelian philosophy. In an See also:order somewhat whimsical he afterwards studied philosophy successively in the See also:schools of the See also:Stoics, the Academics, the See also:Peripatetics and the Epicureans. When he was seventeen years of age, his father, he informs us, was admonished by a See also:dream to devote his son to the study of medicine; but it was fully two years after that Galen entered on this pursuit, under the auspices of an instructor whose name he has thought proper to conceal. Shortly after he betook himself to the study of anatomy under Satyrus, a pupil of See also:Quintus, and of medicine under Stratonicus, a Hippocratic physician, and Aeschrion, an empiric. He had scarcely attained the age of twenty when he had occasion to deplore the loss of thefirst and most affectionate See also:guide of his studies; and soon after he proceeded to See also:Smyrna to obtain the anatomical instructions of See also:Pelops, who, though mystified by some of the errors of Hippocrates, is commemorated by his pupil as a skilful anatomist. After this he appears to have visited various cities distinguished for philosophical or medical teachers; and, -finally, to have gone to Alexandria with the view of cultivating more accurately and intimately the study of anatomy under Heraclianus. Here he remained till his twenty-eighth year, when he regarded himself as possessed of all the knowledge then attainable through the See also:medium of teachers. He now returned to Pergamum to exercise the art which he had so anxiously studied, and received, in his twenty-ninth year, an unequivocal testimony of the confidence which his See also:fellow-citizens reposed in his skill, by being intrusted with the treatment of the wounded See also:gladiators; and in this capacity he is said to have treated wounds with success which were fatal under former treatment. A seditious tumult appears to have caused him to form the See also:resolution of quitting Pergamum and proceeding to Rome at the age of thirty-two. Here, how-ever, he remained only five years; and returning once more to Pergamum, after travelling for some time, finally settled in Rome as physician to the See also:emperor Commodus. The anatomical writings ascribed to Galen, which are numerous, are to be viewed not merely as the result of personal See also:research and information, but as the common depository of the anatomical knowledge of the day, and as combining all that he had learnt from the several teachers under whom he successively studied with whatever personal investigation enabled him to acquire. It is on this account not always easy to distinguish what Galen had himself ascertained by personal research from that which was known by other anatomists. This, however, though of moment to the history of Galen as an anatomist, is of little consequence to the science itself; and from the anatomical remains of this author a pretty just idea may be formed both of the progress and of the actual state of the science at that time. The osteology of Galen is undoubtedly the most perfect of the departments of the anatomy of the ancients. He names and distinguishes the bones and sutures of the cranium nearly in the same manner as at 'See also:present. Thus, he notices the See also:quadrilateral shape of the parietal bones; he distinguishes the squamous, the styloid, the mastoid and the petrous portions of the temporal bones; and he remarks the peculiar situation and shape of the sphenoid bone. Of the ethmoid, which he omits at first, he after-wards speaks more at large in another treatise. The See also:malar he notices under the name of zygomatic bone; and he describes at length the upper maxillary and nasal bones, and the connexion of the former with the sphenoid. He gives the first clear account of the number and situation of the vertebrae, which he divides into cervical, dorsal and lumbar, and distinguishes from the sacrum and coccyx. Under the head Bones of the See also:Thorax, he enumerates the sternum, the ribs (al irXevpai), and the dorsal vertebrae, the connexion of which with the former he designates as a variety of diarthrosis. The description of the bones of the extremities and their articulations concludes the treatise. Though in myology Galen appears to less advantage than in osteology, he nevertheless had carried this part of anatomical knowledge to greater perfection than any of his predecessors. He describes a frontal muscle, the six muscles of the See also:eye and a seventh proper to animals; a muscle to each See also:ala See also:nasi, four muscles of the lips, the thin cutaneous muscle of the neck, which he first termed platysma myoides or muscular expansion, two muscles of the eyelids, and four pairs of muscles of the lower See also:jaw—the temporal to raise, the masseter to draw to one See also:side, and two depressors, corresponding to the digastric and internal pterygoid muscles. After speaking of the muscles which move the head and the scapula, he adverts to those by which the windpipe is opened and shut, and the See also:intrinsic or proper muscles of the larynx and hyoid bone. Then follow those of the tongue, pharynx and neck, those of the upper extremities, the trunk and the lower extremities successively; and in the course of this description he swerves so little from the actual facts that most of the names by which he distinguishes the principal muscles have been retained by the best modern anatomists. It is chiefly in the minute account of these organs, and especially in reference to the minuter muscles, that he appears inferior to the moderns. The angiological knowledge of Galen, though vitiated by the erroneous physiology of the times and ignorance of the See also:separate uses of arteries and veins, exhibits, nevertheless, some ac-See also:curate facts which show the See also:diligence of the author in dissection. Though, in opposition to the opinions of Praxagoras and Erasistratus, he proved that the arteries in the living animal contain not air but blood, it does not appear to have occurred to him to determine in what direction the blood flows, or whether it was movable or stationary. Representing the left ventricle of the heart as the common origin of all the arteries, though he is misled by the pulmonary artery, he nevertheless traces the distribution of the branches of the aorta with some accuracy. The vena aaygos also, and the jugular veins, have contributed to add to the confusion of his description, and to render his angiology the most imperfect of his works. In neurology we find him to be the author of the See also:dogma that the brain is the origin of the nerves of sensation, and the spinal cord of those of motion; and he distinguishes the former from the latter by their greater softness or less consistence. Though he admits only seven cerebral pairs, he has the merit of distinguishing and tracing the distribution of the greater part of both classes of nerves with great accuracy. His description of the brain is derived from dissection of the lower animals, and his distinctions of the several parts of the organ have been retained by modern anatomists. His mode of demonstrating this organ, which indeed is clearly described, consists of five different steps. In the first the bisecting membrane—i.e. the falx (µi vcy Sexoroµoikra)—and the connecting blood-vessels are removed; and the dissector, commencing at the anterior extremity of the great fissure, separates the hemispheres gently as far as the torcular, and exposes a smooth See also:surface (rip xc pav Tv)See also:rc'eb l aces oi'vav), the mesolobe of the moderns, or the middle See also:band. In the second he exposes by successive sections the ventricles, the choroid plexus and the middle partition. The third exhibits the pineal body (oiaµa Kwvoe. Es) or conarium, concealed by a membrane with numerous veins, meaning that part of the plexus which is now known by the name of velum inter positum, and a See also:complete view of the ventricles. The fourth unfolds the third ventricle (ris aX Oi rpirq 00:a), the communication between the two lateral ones, the See also:arch-like body (a& a I/See also:ea)zz&oetbis) fornix, and the passage from the third to the fourth ventricle. In the fifth he gives an accurate description of the relations of the third and fourth ventricle, of the situation of the two pairs of eminences, nates (y)^Ovra) and testtes (&Svula or opxas), the scolecoid or See also:worm-like See also:process, anterior and posterior, and lastly the linear furrow, called by Herophilus calamus scriptorius. In the account of the thoracic organs equal accuracy may be recognized. He distinguishes the pleura by the name of inclosing membrane (i o v irrre]'coKWS, membrana succingens), and remarks its similitude in structure to that of the peritoneum, and the covering which it affords to all the organs. The pericardium also he describes as a membranous See also:sac with a circular basis corresponding to the See also:base of the heart and a conical See also:apex; and after an account of the tunics of the arteries and veins, he speaks shortly of the lung, and more at length of the heart, which, however, he takes some pains to prove not to be muscular, because it is harder, its See also:fibres are differently arranged, and its See also:action is incessant, whereas that of muscle alternates with the state of See also:rest; he gives a good account of the valves and of the vessels; and notices especially the bony See also:ring formed in the heart of the See also:horse, See also:elephant and other large animals. The description of the abdominal organs, and of the kidneys and urinary apparatus, is still more minute, and in general accurate. Our limits, however, do not permit us to give any abstract of them; and it is sufficient in general to say that Galen gives correct views of the arrangement of the peritoneum and omentum, and distinguishes accurately the several divisions of the alimentary canal and its component tissues. In the liver, which he allows to receive an envelope from the peritoneum, headmits, in imitation of Erasistratus, a proper substance or parenchyma, interposed between the vessels, and capable of removal by suitable dissection. His description of the organs of generation is rather brief, and is, like most of his anatomical sketches, too much blended with physiological dogmas. This short sketch may communicate some idea of the See also:condition of anatomical knowledge in the days of Galen, who indeed is justly entitled to the character of rectifying and digesting, if not of creating, the science of anatomy among the ancients. Though evidently confined, perhaps entirely by the circumstances of the times, to the dissection of brute animals, so indefatigable and judicious was he in the mode of acquiring knowledge, that many of his names and distinctions are still retained with advantage in the writings of the moderns. Galen was a See also:practical anatomist, and not only describes the organs of the animal body from actual dissection, but gives ample instructions for the proper mode of exposition. His language is in general clear, his style as correct as in most of the authors of the same period, and his manner is animated. Few passages in early science are indeed so interesting as the description of the process for demonstrating the brain and other internal organs which is given by this patient and enthusiastic observer of nature. To some it may appear absurd to speak of anything like good anatomical description in an author who writes in the Greek language, or anything like an interesting and correct manner in a writer who flourished at a period when See also:taste was depraved or See also:extinct and literature corrupted—when the philosophy of See also:Antoninus and the mild virtues of Aurelius could do little to soften the See also:iron sway of See also:Lucius Verus and Commodus; but the See also:habit of faithful observation in Galen seems to have been so powerful that in the description of material See also:objects, his See also:genius invariably rises above the circumstances of his age. Though not so directly connected with this subject, it is nevertheless proper to mention that he appears to have been the first anatomist who can be said, on authentic grounds, to have attempted to discover the uses of organs by See also:vivisection and experiments on living animals. In this manner he ascertained the position and demonstrated the action of the heart; and he mentions two instances in which, in consequence of disease or injury, he had an opportunity of observing the motions of this organ in the human body. In short, without eulogizing an ancient author at the expense of See also:critical justice, or commending his anatomical descriptions as superior to those of the moderns, it must be admitted that the anatomical writings of the physician of Pergamum form a remarkable era in the history of the science; and that by diligence in dissection and accuracy in description he gave the science a degree of importance and stability which it has retained through a See also:lapse of many centuries. The death of Galen, which took place at Pergamum in the seventieth year of his age and the tooth of the Christian era, may be regarded as the downfall of anatomy in ancient times. After this period we recognize only two names of any celebrity in the history of the science—those of See also:Soranus and Oribasius, with the more obscure ones of Meletius and See also:Theophilus, the latter the See also:chief of the imperial guard of See also:Heraclius. Soranus, who was an Ephesian, and flourished under the emperors Trajan and Hadrian, distinguished himself by his researches on the See also:female organs of generation. He appears to have dissected the human subject; and this perhaps is one reason why his descriptions of these parts are more copious and more accurate than those of Galen, who derived his knowledge from the bodies of the lower animals. He denies the existence of the See also:hymen, but describes accurately the clitoris. Soranus the anatomist must be distinguished from the physician of that name, who was also a native of Ephesus. Oribasius, who was born at Pergamum, is said to have been at once the friend and physician of the emperor See also:Julian, and to have contributed to the See also:elevation of that apostate to Oribasius. the imperial See also:throne. For this he appears to have suffered the See also:punishment of a temporary See also:exile under See also:Valens and Valentinian; but was soon recalled, and lived in great See also:honour till the period of his death (387). By le Clerc, Oribasius is regarded as a compiler; and indeed his anatomical writings bear so See also:close a See also:correspondence with those of Galen that the character is not altogether groundless. In various points, nevertheless, he has rendered the Galenian anatomy more accurate; and he has distinguished himself by a good account of the salivary glands, which were overlooked by Galen. To the same period generally is referred the Anatomical Introduction of an See also:anonymous author, first published in 1618 by Lauremberg, and afterwards by C. See also:Bernard. It is to be regarded as a compilation formed on the See also:model of Galen and Oribasius. The same character is applicable to the treatises of Meletius and Theophilus. The decline indicated by these languid efforts soon sank into a state of See also:total inactivity; and the unsettled state of society during the latter ages of the Roman See also:empire was extremely unfavourable to the successful cultivation of science. The sanguinary conflicts in which the See also:southern countries of See also:Europe were repeatedly engaged with their See also:northern neighbours between the 2nd and 8th centuries tended gradually to estrange their minds from scientific pursuits; and the hordes of .barbarians by which the Roman empire was latterly overrun, while they urged them to the See also:necessity of making hostile resistance, and adopting means of self-See also:defence, introduced such habits of ignorance and barbarism, that science was, almost universally forgotten. While the art of healing was professed only by some few ecclesiastics or by itinerant practitioners, anatomy was utterly neglected; and no name of anatomical celebrity occurs to diversify the long and uninteresting period commonly distinguished as the dark ages. Anatomical learning, thus neglected by See also:European nations, is believed to have received a temporary cultivation from the Arabian Asiatics. Of these, several nomadic tribes, known Physl- to Europeans under the general See also:denomination of See also:Arabs cans. and See also:Saracens, had gradually coalesced under various leaders; and by their habits of endurance, as well as of enthusiastic valour in successive expeditions against the eastern See also:division of the Roman empire, had acquired such military reputation as to render them formidable wherever they appeared. After a See also:century and a See also:half of See also:foreign warfare or internal animosity, under the successive dynasties of the Omayyads and See also:Abbasids, in which the See also:propagation of See also:Islam was the pretext for the extinction of learning and See also:civilization, and the most remorseless system of rapine and destruction, the Saracens began, under the latter dynasty of princes, to recognize the value of science, and especially of that which prolongs life, heals disease and alleviates the See also:pain of wounds and injuries. The See also:caliph Mansur combined with his See also:official knowledge of Moslem law the successful cultivation of See also:astronomy; but to his grandson See also:Mamun, the seventh See also:prince of the See also:line of the Abbasids, belongs the merit of under-taking to render his subjects philosophers and physicians. By the directions of this prince the works of the Greek and Roman authors were translated into Arabic; and the favour and munificence with which literature and its professors were patronized speedily raised a See also:succession of learned Arabians. The See also:residue of the See also:rival family of the Omayyads, already settled in See also:Spain, was prompted by motives of rivalry or See also:honourable ambition to adopt the same course; and while the See also:academy, hospitals and library of See also:Bagdad bore testimony to the zeal and liberality of the Abbasids, the munificence of the Omayyads was not less conspicuous in the See also:literary institutions of See also:Cordova, See also:Seville and See also:Toledo. Notwithstanding the efforts of the Arabian princes, however, and the diligence of the Arabian physicians, little was done for anatomy, and the science made no substantial acquisition. The See also:Koran denounces as unclean the person who touches a See also:corpse; the rules of Islam forbid dissection; and whatever their instructors taught was borrowed from the Greeks. See also:Abu-Bekr Al-Rasi, Abu-See also:Ali See also:Ibn-Sina, Abul-Qasim and Abul Walid ibn Rushd, the Rhazes, See also:Avicenna, Abulcasis and See also:Averroes of European authors, are their most celebrated names in medicine; yet to none of these can the historian with justice ascribe any anatomical merit. Rhazes has indeed left descriptions of the eye, of the ear and its meatus, and of the heart; and Avicenna, Abul-Qasim and Averroes give anatomical descriptions of the parts of the human body. But of these the general character is, that they are copies from Galen, sometimes not very just, and in all instances mystified with a large proportion of the fanciful and absurd imagery and inflated style of the Arabian writers. The chief reason of their obtaining a place in anatomical history is, that by the See also:influence which their medical authority enabled them to exercise in the European schools, the nomenclature which they employed was adopted by European anatomists, and continued till the revival of ancient learning restored the original nomenclature of the Greek physicians. Thus, the cervix, or nape of the neck, is nucha; the oesophagus is meri; the umbilical region is semen or sumac; the See also:abdomen is myrach; the peritoneum is siphac; and the omentum, airbus. From the general character now given justice requires that we except See also:Abdallatif, the annalist of Egyptian affairs. This author, who maintains that it is impossible to learn anatomy from books, and that the authority of Galen must yield to personal inspection, informs us that the Moslem doctors did not neglect opportunities of studying the bones of the human body in cemeteries; and that he himself, by once examining a collection of bones in this manner, ascertained that the lower jaw is formed of one piece; that the sacrum, though sometimes composed of several, is most generally of one; and that Galen is mistaken when he asserts that these bones are not single. The era of Saracen learning extends to the 13th century; and after this we begin to approach happier times. The university of See also:Bologna, which, as a school of literature and school of law, was already celebrated in the See also:lath century, Bologna. became, in the course of the following one, not less distinguished for its medical teachers. Though the misgovernment of the municipal rulers of Bologna had disgusted both teachers and students, and given rise to the foundation of similar institutions in See also:Padua and See also:Naples,—and though the school of See also:Salerno, in the territory of the latter, was still in high repute,—it appears, from the testimony of M. See also:Sarti, that medicine was in the highest esteem in Bologna, and that it was in such perfection as to require a division of its professors into physicians, surgeons, physicians for wounds, See also:barber-surgeons, oculists and even some others. Notwithstanding these indications of refinement, however, anatomy was manifestly cultivated rather as an appendage of See also:surgery than a branch of medical science; and according to the testimony of See also:Guy de Chauliac, the cultivation of anatomical knowledge was confined to See also:Roger of See also:Parma, See also:Roland, Jamerio, See also:Bruno, and See also:Lanfranc or Lanfranchi of See also:Milan; and this they borrowed chiefly from Galen. In this • state matters appear to have proceeded with the medical school of Bologna till the commencement of the 14th century, when the circumstance of possessing a teacher Mondino. of originality enabled this university to be the See also:agent of as great an improvement in medical science as she had already effected in See also:jurisprudence. This era, indeed, is distinguished for the appearance of Mondino (Mundinus), under whose zealous cultivation the science first began to rise from the ashes in which it had been buried. This father of modern anatomy, who taught in Bologna about the year 1315, quickly See also:drew the curiosity of the medical profession by well-ordered demonstrations of the different parts of the human body. In 1315 he dissected and demonstrated the parts of the human body in two female subjects; and in the course of the following year he accomplished the same task on the person of a single female. But while he seems to have had sufficient original force of See also:intellect to direct his own route, J. Riolan accuses him of copying Galen; and it is certain that his descriptions are corrupted by the barbarous See also:leaven of the Arabian schools, and his Latin defaced by the See also:exotic nomenclature of Avicenna and Rhazes. He died, according to G. See also:Tiraboschi, in 1325. Mondino divides the body into three cavities (venires), the upper containing the animal members, as the head, the lower containing the natural members, and the middle containing the spiritual members. He first describes the anatomy of the lower cavity or the abdomen, then proceeds to the middle or thoracic organs, and concludes with the upper, comprising the head and its contents and appendages. His general manner is to notice shortly the situation and shape or distribution of textures or membranes, and then to mention the disorders to which they are subject. The peritoneum he describes under the name of siphac, in imitation of the Arabians, the omentum under that of lirbus, and the mesentery or eucharus as distinct from both. In speaking of the intestines he treats first of the rectum, then the colon, the left or sigmoid flexure of which, as well as the transverse arch and its connexion with the stomach, he particularly remarks; then the caecum or monoculus, after this the small intestines in general under the heads of ileum and jejunum, and latterly the duodenum, making in all six bowels. The liver and its vessels are minutely, if not accurately, examined; and the cava, under the name chilis, a corruption from the Greek «onto, is treated at length, with the emulgents and kidneys. His anatomy of the heart is wonderfully accurate; and it is a remarkable fact, which seems to be omitted by all subsequent authors, that his description contains the rudiments of the circulation of the blood. " Postea vero versus pulmonem est aliud orificium venae arterialis, quae portat sanguinem ad pulmonem a corde; quia cum pulmo deserviat cordi secundum modum dictum, ut ei recompenset, See also:cor ei transmittit sanguinem per hanc venam, quae vocatur vena arterialis; est vena, quia portat sanguinem, et arterialis, quia habet duas tunicas; et habet duas tunicas, primo quia vadit ad membrum quod existit in continuo motu, et secundo quia portat sanguinem valde subtilem et cholericum." The merit of these distinctions, however, he afterwards destroys by repeating the old assertion that the left ventricle ought to contain spirit or air, which it generates from the blood. His osteology of the skull is erroneous. In his account of the cerebral membranes,though short, he notices the principal characters of the dura mater. He describes shortly the lateral ventricles, with their anterior and posterior cornua, and the choroid plexus as a blood-red substance like a long worm. He then speaks of the third or middle ventricle, and one posterior, which seems to correspond with the fourth; and describes the infundibulum under the names of lacuna and emboton. In the base of the organ he remarks, first, two mammillary caruncles, the optic nerves, which he reckons the first pair; the oculomuscular, which he accounts the second; the third, which appears to be sixth of the moderns; the fourth; the fifth, evidently the seventh; a sixth, the nervus vagus; and a seventh, which is the ninth of the moderns. Notwithstanding the misrepresentations into which this early anatomist was betrayed, his book is valuable, and has been illustrated by the successive commentaries of Alessandro See also:Achillini, Jacopo Berengario and Johann See also:Dryander (15oo—r 560). See also:Matthew de Gradibus, a native of Gradi, a See also:town in See also:Friuli, near Milan, distinguished himself by composing a series of treatises on the anatomy of various parts of the human body (1480). He is the first who represents the ovaries of the female in the correct See also:light in which they were subsequently regarded by See also:Nicolas See also:Steno or Stensen (1638—1687). Objections similar to those already urged in speaking of Mondino apply to another eminent anatomist of those times. See also:Gabriel de Zerbis, who flourished at See also:Verona towards the conclusion of the 15th century, is celebrated as the author of a system in which he is obviously more anxious to astonish his readers by the wonders of a verbose and complicated style than to instruct by precise and faithful description. In the vanity of his heart he assumed the title of Medicus Theoricus; but though, like Mondino, he derived his information from the dissection of the human subject, he is not entitled to the merit either of describing truly or of adding to the knowledge previously acquired. He is superior to Mondino, however, in knowing the olfactory nerves.
Eminent in the history of the science, and more distinguished
than any of this age in the history of cerebral anatomy, Achillini
pc61111ni. of Bologna (1463-1512), the pupil and commentator of
Mondino, appeared at the close of the 15th century.
Though a follower of the Arabian school, the assiduity with
which he cultivated anatomy has rescued his name from the inglorious obscurity in which the Arabian doctors have in general slumbered. He is known in the history of anatomical See also:discovery as the first who described the two tympanal bones, termed malleus and incus. In 1503 he showed that the See also:tarsus consists of seven bones; he rediscovered the fornix and the infundibulum; and he was fortunate enough to observe the course of the cerebral cavities into the inferior cornua, and to remark peculiarities to which the anatomists of a future age did not advert. He mentions the orifices of the ducts, afterwards described by See also: In the former character he surpassed both predecessors and contemporaries; and it was long before the anatomists of the following age could boast of equalling him. His assiduity was indefatigable; and he declares that he dissected above one See also:hundred human bodies. He is the author of a compendium, of several treatises which he names Introductions (Isagogae), and of commentaries on the treatise of Mondino, in which he not only rectifies the mistakes of that anatomist, but gives minute and in general accura to anatomical descriptions. He is the first who undertakes a systematic view of the several textures of which the human body is composed; and in a preliminary commentary he treats successively of the anatomical characters and properties of fat, of membrane in general (panniculus), of flesh, of nerve, of villas or fibre (ilium), of ligament, of sinew or tendon, and of muscle in general. He then proceeds to describe with considerable precision the muscles of the abdomen, and illustrates their site and connexions by woodcuts which, though rude, are spirited, and show that anatomical See also:drawing was in that early age beginning to be understood. In his account of the peritoneum he admits only the intestinal division of that membrane, and is at some pains to prove that Gentilis Fulgineus, who justly admits the muscular division also, is in See also:error. In his account of the intestines he is the first who mentions the vermiform process of the caecum; he remarks tha yellow tint communicated to the duodenum by the See also:gall-bladder; and he recognizes the opening of the common biliary duct into the duodenum (quidam See also:porus portans choleram). In the account of the stomach he describes the several tissues of which that organ is composed, and which he represents to be three, and a fourth from the peritoneum; and afterwards notices the rugae of its villous surface. He is at considerable pains to explain the organs of generation in both sexes, and gives a long account of the anatomy of the foetus. He was the first who recognized the larger proportional See also:size of the See also:chest in the male than in the female, and conversely the greater capacity of the female than of the male pelvis. In the larynx he discovered the two See also:arytenoid cartilages. He gives the first good description of the thymus; distinguishes the oblique situation of the heart; describes the pericardium, and maintains the See also:uniform presence of pericardial liquor. He then describes the cavities of the heart; but perplexes himself, as did all the anatomists of that age, about the spirit supposed to be contained. The aorta he properly makes to arise from the left ventricle; but confuses himself with the arteria venalis, the pulmonary vein, and the vena arterialis, the puis monary artery. His account of the brain is better. He gives a minute and clear account of the ventricles, remarks the corpus striatum, and has the sagacity to perceive that the choroid plexus consists of veins and arteries; he then describes the middle of
third ventricle, the infundibulum or lacuna of Mondino, and the pituitary gland; and lastly, the passage to the fourth ventricle, the conarium or pineal gland, and the fourth or posterior ventricle itself, the relations of which he had studied accurately. He rectifies the mistake of Mondino as to the olfactory or first pair of nerves, gives a good account of the optic and others, and is entitled to the praise of originality in being the first observer who contradicts the fiction of the wonderful See also:net and indicates the principal divisions of the carotid arteries. He enumerates the tunics and humours of the eye, and gives an account of the internal ear, in which he notices the malleus and incus.
See also:Italy long retained the distinction of giving See also:birth to the first eminent anatomists in Europe, and the See also:glory she acquired in the
See also:French names of Mondino, Achillini, Berenger and N. See also:Massa,
school. was destined to become more conspicuous in the labours
of R. See also:Columbus, G. See also:Fallopius and Eustachius. While Italy, however, was thus advancing the progress of science, the other nations of Europe were either in profound ignorance or in the most supine indifference to the brilliant career of their zealous neighbours. The 16th century had commenced before See also:France began to acquire anatomical distinction in the names of Jacques See also:Dubois, See also:Jean See also:Fernel and See also: The infancy of the French school had to contend with other difficulties. The small portion of knowledge which had been hitherto diffused in the country was so inadequate to eradicate the prejudices of ignorance, that it was either difficult or absolutely impossible to procure human bodies for the purposes of science; and we are assured, on the testimony of A. Vesalius and other competent authorities, that the practical part of anatomical instruction was obtained entirely from the bodies of the lower animals. The works of the See also:Italian anatomists were unknown; and it is a See also:proof of the tardy communication of know-ledge that, while the structure of the human body had been taught in Italy for more than a century by Mondino and his followers, these anatomists are never mentioned by Etienne, who flourished long after. Such was the aspect of the times at the appearance of Jacques Dubois (1478-1555), who, under the Romanized name of Jacobus Uubuis. Sylvius, according to the See also:fashion of the day, has been fortunate in acquiring a reputation to which his re-searches do not entitle him. For the name of Dubois the history of anatomy, it is said, is indebted to his inordinate love of See also:money. At the instance of his See also:brother See also:Francis, who was professor of eloquence in the See also:college of Tournay at See also:Paris, he devoted himself to the study of the learned See also:languages and See also:mathematics; but discovering that these elegant accomplishments do not invariably See also:reward their cultivators with the'goods of See also:fortune, Dubois betook himself to medicine. After the acquisition of a medical degree in the university of See also:Montpellier, at the ripe age of fifty-one Dubois returned to Paris to resume a course of anatomical instruction. Here he taught anatomy to a numerous See also:audience in the college of Trinquet; and on the departure of Vidus Vidius for Italy was appointed to succeed that physician as professor of surgery to the Royal College. His character is easily estimated. With greater coarseness in his See also:manners and language than even the rude state of society in his times can palliate, with much varied learning and considerable eloquence, he was a See also:blind, indiscriminate and irrational admirer of Galen, and interpreted the anatomical and physiological writings of that author in preference to giving demonstrations from the subject. Without See also:talent for original research or discovery himself, his envy and See also:jealousy made him detest every one who gave proofs of either. We are assured by Vesalius, who was some time his pupil, that his manner of teaching was calculated neither to advance the science nor to rectify the mistakes of his predecessors. A human body was never seen in the See also:theatre of Dubois; the carcases of See also:dogs and other animals were the materials from which he taught; and so difficult even was it to obtain human bones, that unless Vesalius and his fellow-students had collected assiduously from the Innocents and other cemeteries, they must have committednumerous errors in acquiring the first principles. This assertion, however, is contradicted by J. Riolan, and afterwards by K. P. J. See also:Sprengel and T. Lauth, the last of whom decidedly censures Vesalius for this ungrateful treatment of his instructor. It is certain that opportunities of inspecting the human body were by no means so frequent as to facilitate the study of the science. Though his mention of injections has led some to suppose him the discoverer of that art, he appears to have made no substantial addition to the information already acquired; and the first acknowledged professor of anatomy to the university of Paris appears in history as one who lived without true honour and died without just celebrity. He must not be confounded with Franciscus Sylvius (de le Boe), who is mentioned by F. Ruysch and M. V. G. Malacarne as the author of a particular method of demonstrating the brain.
Almost coeval may be placed Charles Etienne (1503-1564), a younger brother of the celebrated printers, and son to See also: The researches of Etienne into the structure of the nervous system are, however, neither useless nor inglorious; and the circumstance of demonstrating a canal through the entire length of the spinal cord, which had neither been suspected by contemporaries nor noticed by successors till J. B. Senac (1693–177o) made it known, is sufficient to place him high in the See also:rank of anatomical discoverers.
The French anatomy of the 16th century was distinguished by two circumstances unfavourable to the See also:advancement of the science —extravagant admiration of antiquity, with excessive yeseilus. confidence in the writings of Galen, and the general practice of dissecting principally the bodies of the lower animals. Both these errors were much amended, if not entirely removed, by the exertions of a See also:young See also:Fleming, whose appearance forms a conspicuous era in the history of anatomy. Andreas Vesalius, (1514-1564), a native of See also:Brussels, after acquiring at See also:Louvain the ordinary classical attainments of the day, began at the age of fourteen to study anatomy under the auspices of Dubois. Though the originality of his mind soon led him to abandon the prejudices by which he was environed, and take the most direct course for attaining a knowledge of the structure of the human frame, he neither underrated the Galenian anatomy nor was indolent in the dissection of brute animals. The difficulties, however, with which the practical pursuit of human anatomy was beset in France, and the dangers with which he had to contend, made him look to Italy as a suitable See also: The early age at which he effected this object has been to his biographers the theme of boundless See also:commendation; and we are told that he began at the age of twenty-five to arrange the materials he had collected, and accomplished his task ere he had completed his 28th year.
Soon after this period we find him invited as imperial physician to the See also:court of Charles V., where he was occupied in the duties of practice and answering the various charges which were unceasingly brought against him by the disciples of Galen. After the See also:abdication of Charles he continued at court in great favour with his son Philip II. To this he seems to have been led principally by the troublesome controversies in which his anatomical writings had involved him. It is painful to think, however, that even imperial patronage bestowed on eminent talents does not ensure See also:immunity from popular prejudice; and the See also:fate of Vesalius will be a lasting example of the barbarism of the times, and of the See also:precarious See also:tenure of the safety even of a great physician. On the preliminary circumstances authors are not agreed; but the most general account states that when Vesalius was dissecting, with the consent of his kinsmen, the body of a See also:Spanish See also:grandee, it was observed that the heart still gave some feeble palpitations when divided by the See also:knife. The immediate effects of this See also:outrage to human feelings were the denunciation of the anatomist to the See also:Inquisition; and Vesalius escaped the severe treatment of that tribunal only by the influence of the See also: To form a correct estimate of the character and merits of Vesalius, we must not compare him, in the spirit of modern perfection, with the anatomical authors either of later times or of the present day. Whoever would frame a just idea of this anatomist must imagine, not a bold innovator without academical learning, not a genius coming from a foreign country, unused to the forms and habits of See also:Catholic Europe, nor a See also:wild reformer, blaming indiscriminately everything which accorded not with his opinion; but a young student scarcely emancipated from the authority of instructors, whose intellect was still influenced by the doctrines with which it had been originally imbued,—a See also:scholar strictly trained in the opinions of the time, living amidst men who venerated Galen as the See also:oracle of anatomy and the divinity of medicine,—exercising his reason to estimate the soundness of the instructions then in use, and proceeding, in the way least likely to offend authority and See also:wound prejudice, to rectify errors, and to establish on the solid basis of observation the true elements of anatomical science. Vesalius has been denominated the founder of human anatomy; and though we have seen that in this career he was preceded with honour by Mondino and Berenger, still the small proportion of correct observation which their reverence for Galen and Arabian doctrines allowed them to communicate, will not in a material degree impair the original merits of Vesalius. The errors which he rectified and the additions which he made are so numerous, I. 30929 that it is impossible, in such a sketch as the present, to communicate a just idea of them. Besides the first good description of the sphenoid bone, he showed that the sternum consists of three portions and the sacrum of five or six; and described accurately the See also:vestibule in the interior of the temporal bone. He not only verified the observation of Etienne on the valves of the hepatic veins, but he described well the vena azygos, and discovered the canal which passes in the foetus between the umbilical vein and the vena cava, since named ductus venosus. He described the omentum, and its connexions with the stomach, the spleen and the colon; gave the first correct views of the structure of the pylorus; remarked the small size of the caecal appendix in man; gave the first good account of the mediastinum and pleura and the fullest description of the anatomy of the brain yet advanced. He appears, however, not to have understood well the inferior recesses; and his account of the nerves is See also:con-fused by regarding the optic as the first pair, the third as the fifth and the fifth as the seventh. The labours of Vesalius were not limited to the immediate effect produced by his own writings. His instructions and examples produced a multitude of anatomical inquirers of different characters and varied celebrity, by whom the science was extended and rectified. Of these we cannot speak in detail; but historical justice requires us to notice shortly those to whose exertions the science of anatomy has been most indebted. The first that claims attention on this account is Bartolomeo Eustachi of See also:San Severino, near Salerno, who though greatly less fortunate in reputation than his contemporary Vesalius, divides with him the merit of creating the etr u science of human anatomy. He extended the knowledge of the internal ear by rediscovering and describing correctly the tube which bears his name; and if we admit that G. F. Ingrassias anticipated him in the knowledge of the third bone of the tympanal cavity, the stapes, he is still the first who described the internal and anterior muscles of the malleus, as also the slapedius, and the complicated figure of the cochlea. He is the first who studied accurately the anatomy of the teeth, and the phenomena of the first and second dentition. The work, however, which demonstrates at once the great merit and the unhappy fate of Eustachius is his Anatomical Engravings, which, though completed in 1552, nine years after the impression of the work of Vesalius, the author was unable to publish. First communicated to the world in 1714 by G. M. Lancisi, afterwards in 1744 by See also:Cajetan Petrioli, again in 1744 by B. S. See also:Albinus, and subsequently at See also:Bonn in 1790, the engravings show that Eustachius had dissected with the greatest care and diligence, and taken the utmost pains to give just views of the shape, size and relative position of the organs of the human body. The first seven plates illustrate the history of the kidneys and some of the facts relating to the structure of the ear. The eighth represents the heart, the ramifications of the vena azygos, and the valve of the vena cava, named from the author. In the seven subsequent plates is given a succession of different views of the viscera of the chest and abdomen. The seventeenth contains the brain and spinal cord; and the eighteenth more accurate views of the origin, course and distribution of the nerves than had been given before. Fourteen plates are devoted to the muscles. Eustachius did not confine his researches to the study of relative anatomy. He investigated the intimate structure of organs with assiduity and success. What was too minute for unassisted See also:vision he inspected by means of glasses. Structure which could not be understood in the See also:recent state, he unfolded by maceration in different fluids, or rendered more distinct by injection and exsiccation. The facts unfolded in these figures are so important that it is justly remarked by Lauth, that if the author himself had been fortunate enough to publish them, anatomy would have attained the perfection of the 18th century two centuries earlier at least. Their seclusion for that period in the papal library has given celebrity to many names which would have been known only in the verification of the discoveries of Eustachius. II M. R. Columbus and G. Fallopius were pupils of Vesalius. Columbus, as his immediate successor in Padua, and afterwards Columbus. as professor at Rome, distinguished himself by rectify- See also:ing and improving the anatomy of the bones; by giving correct accounts of the shape and cavities of the heart, of the pulmonary artery and aorta and their valves, and tracing the course of the blood from the right to the left side of the heart; by a good description of the brain and its vessels, and by correct understanding of the internal ear, and the first good account of the ventricles of the larynx. Fallopius, who, after being professor at Pisa in 1548, and at Padua in 1551, died at the age of See also:forty, studied the general Fallopius. anatomy of the bones; described better than hereto- fore the internal ear, especially the tympanum and its osseous ring, the two fenestrae and their communication with the vestibule and cochlea; and gave the first good account of the stylo-mastoid hole and canal, of the ethmoid bone and cells, and of the lacrymal passages. In myology he rectified several mistakes of Vesalius. He also devoted attention to the organs of generation in both sexes, and discovered the utero-peritoneal canal which still bears his name. Osteology nearly at the same time found an assiduous See also:cultivator in Giovanni Filippo Ingrassias (1545-158o) , a learned Sicilian ingrassias. physician, who, in a skilful commentary on the osteo- logy of Galen, corrected numerous mistakes. He gave the first distinct account of the true configuration of the sphenoid and ethmoid bones, and has the merit of first describing (1546) the third bone of the tympanum, called stapes, though this is also claimed by Eustachius and Fallopius. The anatomical descriptions of Vesalius underwent the See also:scrutiny of various inquirers. Those most distinguished by the Aranzi. importance and accuracy of their researches, as well as the temperate See also:tone of their observations, were See also:Julius See also:Caesar Aranzi (1530-1589), anatomical professor for thirty-two years in the university of Bologna, and Constantio Varoli, physician to See also:Pope See also:Gregory XIII. To the former we are indebted for the first correct account of the anatomical peculiarities of the foetus, and he was the first to show that the muscles of the eye do not, as was falsely imagined, arise from the dura mater but from the margin of the optic hole. He also, after considering the anatomical relations of the cavities of the heart, the valves and the great vessels, corroborates the views of Columbus regarding the course which the blood follows in passing from the right to the left side of the heart. Aranzi is the first anatomist who describes distinctly the inferior cornua of the ventricles of the cerebrum, who recognizes the objects by which they are distinguished, and who gives them the name by which they are still known (hippocampus) ; and his account is more minute and perspicuous than that of the authors of the subsequent century. He speaks at large of the choroid plexus, and gives a particular description of the fourth ventricle, under the name of cistern of the cerebellum, as a discovery of his own. Italy, though See also:rich in anatomical talent, has probably few greater names than that of Constantio Varoli (b. 1543) of Bologna. Vomitus. Though he died at the early age of thirty-two, he acquired a reputation not inferior to that of the most eminent of his contemporaries. He is now known chiefly as the author of an See also:epistle, inscribed to Hieronymo Mercuriali, on the optic nerves, in which he describes a new method of dissect- ing the brain, and communicates many interesting particulars relating to the anatomy of the organ. He observes the threefold division of the inferior surface or base, defines the limits of the anterior, middle and posterior eminences, as marked by the com- partments of the skull, and justly remarks that the cerebral cavities are capacious, communicate with each other, extending first backward and then forward, near the See also:angle of the pyramidal portion of the temporal bone, and that they are folded on them- selves, and finally lost above the middle and inferior eminence of the brain. He appears to have been aware that at this point they communicate with the exterior or convoluted surface. He recognized the impropriety of the term corpus callosum, seems to have known the communication called afterwards foramen Monroianum, and describes the See also:hip pocampus more minutely than had been previously done. Among the anatomists of the Italian school, as a pupil of Fallopius, Eustachius and U. Aldrovandus, is generally enumerated Volcher Coiter (b. 1534) of See also:Groningen. He distinguished himself by accurate researches on the cartilages, the bones and the nerves, recognized the value of morbid anatomy, and made experiments on living animals to ascertain the action of the heart and the influence of the See also:braid'
The Frutefull and Necessary Briefe Worke of See also: Mondino believed that the blood proceeds from the heart to the lungs through the vena arterialis or pulmonary artery, and that the aorta conveys the spirit into the blood through all parts of the body. This See also:doctrine was adopted with little modification by Berenger, who further demonstrated the existence and operation of the tricuspid valves in the right ventricle, and of the sigmoid valves at the beginning of the pulmonary artery and aorta, and that there were only two ventricles separated by a solid impervious septum. These were afterwards described in greater detail by Vesalius, who nevertheless appears not to have been aware of the important use which might be made of this knowledge. It was the Spaniard See also:Michael Servet or Servetus (born in 1509, burnt in 1553) who in his treatise De Servetus. Trinitatis Erroribus, published at Haguenau in 1531,
first maintained the imperviousness of the septum, and the
' An interesting article on the character and work of the See also:Maidstone surgeon, John See also:Halle, by E. See also:Barclay See also: The See also:manuscript was written in English in 1392. See See also:British Medical Journal, See also:January 25, 1896.
transition of the blood by what he terms an unknown route, namely, from the right ventricle by the vena arteriosa (pulmonary artery) to the lungs, and thence into the arteria See also:venosa or pulmonary vein and left See also:auricle and ventricle, from which, he adds afterwards, it is conveyed by the aorta to all parts of the body.'
Though the leading outlines, not only of the pulmonary or small but even of the great circulation, were sketched thus early by one who, though a philosopher, was attached to the See also: Est spiritus tenuis, caloris vi elaboratus, flavo colore, ignea potentia, ut sit quasi ex puriore sanguine lucens, vapor substantiam continens See also:aquae, aeris, et ignis. Generatur ex facta in pulmone commixtione inspirati aeris cum elaborato subtili sanguine, quem See also:dexter ventriculus sinistro cornmunicat. See also:Fit autem communicatio haec, non per parietem cordis medium, ut vulgo creditur, sed magno artificio a dextro cordis ventriculo, longo per pulmones ductu agitatur sanguis subtilis; a pulmonibus praeparatur, flavus efficitur, et a vena arteriosa in arteriam venosam transfunditur. Deinde in ipsa arteria venosa, inspirato aeri miscetur et exspiratione a fuligine expurgatur; atque ita tandem a sinistro cordis ventriculo totum mixtum per diastolen attrahitur, apta supellex, ut fiat spiritus vitalis. Quod ita per pulmones fiat communicatio et praeparatio, docet conjunctio See also:varia, et communicatio venae arteriosae cum arteria venosa in pulmonibus. Confirmat hoc magnitudo insignis venae arteriosae, quae nec talis nec See also:tanta esset facta, nec tantam a corde ipso vim purissimi sanguinis in pulmones emitteret, ob solum eorum nutrimentum; nec cor pulmonibus hac ratione serviret, cum praesertim antea inembryone solerent pulmones ipsi aliunde nutriri, ob membranulas illas seu valvulas cordis, usque ad horum nativitatem; ut docet Galenus, &c. Itaque ille spiritus a sinistro cordis ventriculo arterias totius corporis deinde transfunditur, ita ut qui tenuior est, superiora See also:petit, ubi magis elaboratur, praecipue in plexu retiformi, sub basi cerebri sito, ubi ex vitali fieri incipit animalis, ad propriam rationalis animae rationem accedens."—De Trinitale, See also:lib. v.subsided, the doctrine of the circular motion of the blood was admitted by all enlightened and unprejudiced persons, and finally was universally adopted as affording the most satisfactory explanation of many facts in anatomical structure which were either misunderstood or entirely overlooked. The inquiries to which the investigation of the doctrine gave rise produced numerous researches on the shape and structure of the heart and its divisions, of the lungs, and of the blood-vessels and their distribution. Of this description were the researches of Nicolas Steno on the structure of the heart, the classical work of See also:Richard Lower, the dissertation of J. N. See also:Pechlin, the treatise of See also:Raymond Vieussens, the work of See also:Marcello See also:Malpighi on the structure of the lungs, several sketches in the writings of John See also:Mayow, and other treatises of less moment. Systematic treatises of anatomy began to assume a more instructive form, and to breathe a more philosophical spirit. The great work of See also:Adrian Spigelius, which appeared in 1627, two years after the death of the author, contains indeed no proof that he was aware of the valuable generalization of Harvey; but in the institutions of Caspar See also:Bartholinus, as republished and improved by his son Thomas in 1651, the anatomical descriptions and explanations are given with reference to the new doctrine. A still more unequivocal proof of the progress of correct anatomical knowledge was given in the lectures delivered by See also:Peter Dionis, at the Jardin Royal of Paris, in 1673 and the seven following years, in which that intelligent surgeon gave most accurate demonstrations of all the parts composing the human frame, and especially of the heart, its auricles, ventricles and valves, and the large vessels connected with it and the lungs. These demonstrations, first published in 1690, were so much esteemed that they passed through seven See also:editions in the space of thirty years, and were translated into English.
The progress of anatomical discovery continued in the mean-time to advance. In the course of the 16th century Eustachius, in studying minutely the structure of the vena azygos, had recognized in the horse a See also: Five years after (1634), John Wesling, professor of anatomy and surgery at Venice, gave the first delineation of the lacteals from the human subject, and evinced more accurate knowledge than his predecessors of the thoracic duct and the lymphatics.. Nathaniel Highmore' in 1637 demonstrated unequivocally the difference between the lacteals and the mesenteric veins; and though some perplexity ' Highmore was a physician practising at See also:Sherborne all his life (1613-1685). was occasioned by the discovery of the pancreatic duct by See also:Christopher Wirsung, this mistake was corrected by Thomas Bartholinus; and the discovery by Jean Pecquet in 1647 of the common trunk of the lacteals and lymphatics, and of the course which the chyle follows to reach the blood, may be regarded as the last of the series of isolated facts by the generalization of which the extent, distribution and uses of the most important organs of the animal body were at length See also:developed. To complete the history of this part of anatomical science one step yet remained—the distinction between the lacteals and JoyUfle. lymphatics, and the discovery of the termination of the latter order of vessels. The honour of this discovery is divided between See also:George Joyliffe (1621-1658), an English anatomist, and Olaus Rudbeck (163o-17o2), a young Swede. The former, according to the testimony of Francis Glisson and Thomas Wharton, was aware of the distinct existence of. the lymphatics in 165o, and demonstrated them as such in 1652. It is nevertheless doubtful whether he knew them much before the latter period; and it is certain that Rudbeck observed the lymphatics of the large intestines, and traced them to glands, on the 27th of January 1651, after he had, in the course of 165o, made various erroneous conjectures regarding them, and, like others, attempted to trace them to the liver. The following year he demonstrated them in presence of See also:Queen See also:Christina, and traced them to the thoracic duct, and the latter to the subclavian vein. Their course and distribution were still more fully investigated by Thomas Bartholinus, Wharton, J. See also:Swammerdam and G. Blaes, the last two of whom recognized the existence of valves; while Antony Nuck of See also:Leiden, by rectifying various errors of his predecessors, and adding several new and valuable observations, rendered this part of anatomy much more precise than formerly. After this period anatomists began to study more minutely the organs and textures. Francis Glisson' distinguished himself by a minute description of the liver (1654), and a clearer account of the stomach and intestines, than had yet been given. Thomas Wharton 2 investigated the structure of the glands with particular care; and though rather prone to indulge in fanciful generalization, he developed some interesting views of these organs; while See also:Walter Charleton (1619-17o7), who appears to have been a person of great genius, though addicted to hypothesis, made some good remarks on the communication of the arteries with the veins, the foetal circulation and the course of the lymphatics. But the circumstance which chiefly distinguished the history of anatomy at the beginning of the 17th century was the appear-Wims. ance of Thomas Willis3 (1621-1675), who rendered himself eminent not only by good researches on the brain and nerves, but by many judicious observations on the structure of the lungs, the intestines, the blood-vessels and the glands. His anatomy of the brain and nerves is so minute and elaborate, and abounds so much in new information, that the reader is struck by the immense chasm between the vague and meagre notices of his predecessors and the ample and correct descriptions of See also:Willis. This excellent work, however, is not the result of his own personal and unaided exertions; and the character of Willis derives additional lustre from the candid avowal of his obligations to See also:Sir Christopher See also:Wren and Thomas Millington, and, above all, to the diligent researches of his fellow-anatomist Richard Lower. Willis was the first who numbered the See also:cranial nerves in the order in which they are now usually enumerated by anatomists. His observation of the connexion of the eighth pair with the slender nerve which issues from the beginning of the spinal cord is known to all. He remarked the parallel lines of the mesolobe, afterwards minutely described by See also:Felix Vicq d'Azyr (1748-1794). He seems to have recognized the communication of the convoluted surface of the brain and that between the lateral cavities beneath the fornix. He described the corpora striata and optic thalami; ' Glisson was for forty years professor of physic at See also:Cambridge. 2 Wharton was a See also:graduate both of See also:Oxford and Cambridge, and physician to St Thomas's See also:Hospital. ' Willis was Sedleian professor of natural philosophy in Oxford in 1660. Later he practised in London.the four orbicular eminences, with the See also:bridge, which he first named See also:annular protuberance; and the white mammillary eminences, behind the infundibulum. In the cerebellum he remarks the arborescent arrangement of the white and See also:grey matter, and gives a good account of the internal carotids, and the communications which they make with the branches of the basilar artery. About the middle of the 17th century R. See also:Hooke and See also:Nehemiah See also:Grew employed the See also:simple See also:microscope in the minute examination of See also:plants and animals; and the Dutch philosopher A. See also:Leeuwenhoek with great acuteness examined microscopically the solids and fluids of the body, recognized the presence of scales in the cuticle, and discovered the corpuscles in the blood and See also:milk, and the spermatozoa in the seminal fluid. The researches of Malpighi also tended greatly to improve the knowledge of minute Malpighi.. structure. He gave the first distinct ideas on the organization of the lung, and the mode in which the bronchial tubes and vessels terminate in that organ. By the microscope he traced the transition of the arteries into the veins, and saw the movements of the blood corpuscles in the capillaries. He endeavoured to unfold,by dissection and microscopic observation, the minute structure of the brain. He studied the structure of bone, he traced the formation and explained the structure of the teeth; and his name is to this day associated with the discovery of the deeper layer of the cuticle and the Malpighian bodies in the spleen and kidney. In these difficult inquiries the observations of Malpighi are in general faithful, and he may be regarded as the founder of histological anatomy. Nicolas Steno, or Stensen, described with accuracy (r66o) the lacrymal gland and passages, and rediscovered the parotid duct. L. See also:Bellini studied the structure of the kidneys, and described the tongue and tonsils with some care; and Charles Drelincourt laboured to investigate the changes effected on the uterus by impregnation, and to elucidate the formation of the foetus. The science might have derived still greater advantages from the genius of See also:Regnier de Graaf, who investigated with accuracy the structure of the pancreas and of the organs of generation in both, sexes, had he not been cut off at the early age of thirty-two. Lastly, Wepfer, though more devoted to morbid anatomy, made,: nevertheless, some just observations on the anatomical disposition of the cerebral vessels, the glandular structure of the liver, and the termination of the common duct in the duodenum.
The appearance of See also:Frederic Ruysch, who was born in 1638, became professor of anatomy at See also:Amsterdam in 1665 and rdied in that See also:city in 1731, gave a new impulse to anatomi- Ruysch. cal research, and tended not only to give the science
greater precision, but to extend its limits in every direction. The talents of Ruysch are said to have been developed by See also:accident. To repel the audacious and calumnious aspersions with which See also: He studied the minute structure of the brain; he demonstrated the organization of the choroid plexus; he de-scribed the state of the See also:hair when affected with See also:Polish See also:plait; he proved the vascular structure of the teeth; he injected the dura mater, the pleura, the pericardium and peritoneum; he unfolded the minute structure of the See also:conglomerate glands; he investigated that of the synovial apparatus placed in the interior of the See also:joints; and he discovered several curious particulars relating to the lacteals, the lymphatics and the lymphatic glands. Meanwhile, H. Meibomius rediscovered (167o) the palpebral glands, which were known to Casserius; Swammerdam'studied the action of the lungs, described the structure of the human uterus, and made numerous valuable observations on the coeca and pancreatoid organs of fishes; and Th. Kerckring laid the foundation of a knowledge of the process of ossification. John See also:Conrad See also:Brunner, in the course of experiments on the pancreas, discovered (1687) the glands of the duodenum named after him, and J. Conrad Peyer (1677-1681) described the solitary and agminated glands of the intestinal canal. Leonard Tassin, distinguished for original observation, rendered the anatomical history of the brain more accurate than heretofore, and gave particular accounts of the intestinal tube, the pancreatic duct and the hepatic ligaments (1678). That France might not be without participation in the glory of advancing the progress of anatomical knowledge, the names Duveroey. of See also:Joseph See also:Guichard Duverney and Vieussens are commemorated with distinction. Duverney, born in 1648, and first introduced into public life in 1676 in the Royal Academy of Sciences, decorated with the honorary title of professor of anatomy to the dauphin, and appointed in 1679 professor at the Jardin Royal, distinguished himself by the first accurate account of the organ of See also:hearing, and by his dissections of several animals at the academy supplied valuable materials for the anatomical details of the natural history of animals published by that learned body. He appears to have been the first who demonstrated the fact that the cerebral sinuses open into the jugular veins, and to have been aware that the former receives the veins of the brain and are the venous receptacles of the organ. He understood the cerebral cavities and their mode of communication; distinguishes the posterior pillars of the vault from the pedes hippocampi; recognizes the two plates of the septum lucidum; and, what is still more remarkable, he first indicates distinctly the discussation of the anterior pyramids. of the medulla oblongata—a fact afterwards verified by the researches of Mistichelli, F. P. du Petit and G.D. Santorini. He studied the ganglions attentively, and gives the first distinct account of the formation, connexions and distribution of the intercostal nerves. It is interesting to remark that his statement that the veins or sinuses of the spinal cord terminate in the vena azygos was verified by the subsequent researches of G. See also:Dupuytren (1777-1835) and G. Breschet (1784-1845), which showed that the vertebral veins communicate by means of the intercostal and superior lumbar veins with the azygos and hemi-azygos. His account of the structure of bones and of the progress of ossification is valuable. He recognized the vascular structure of the spleen, and described the excretory ducts of the prostate gland, the verumontanum, and the ante-prostates. One of the circumstances which at this time tended consider-ably to the improvement of anatomical science was the attention with which Comparative Anatomy was beginning to be cultivated. In ancient times, and at the revival of letters, the dissection of the lower animals was substituted for that of the human body; and the descriptions of the organs of the latter were too often derived from the former. The obloquy and contempt in which this abuse involved the study of animal anatomy caused it to be neglected, or pursued with indifference, for more than two centuries, during which anatomists confined their descriptions,at least very much, to the parts of the human body. At this period, however, the prejudice against Comparative Anatomy began to subside; and animal dissection, though not substituted for that of the human body, was employed, as it ought always to have been, to illustrate obscurities, to determine doubts and to explain difficulties, and, in short, to enlarge and rectify the knowledge of the structure of animal bodies generally. For this revolution in its favour, Comparative Anatomy was in a great measure indebted to the learned See also:societies which were established about this time in the different countries of Europe. Among these, the Royal Society of London, embodied by See also:charter by Charles II. in 1662, and the Academy of Sciences of Paris, founded in 1666 by J. B. See also:Colbert, are undoubtedly entitled to the first rank. Though later in See also:establishment, the latter institution was distinguished by making the first great efforts in favour of Comparative Anatomy; and See also:Claude See also:Perrault, Pecquet, Duverney and Jean Wry, by the dissections of rare animals obtained from the royal See also:menagerie, speedily supplied valuable materials for the anatomical naturalist. In See also:England, Nehemiah Grew, See also:Edward Tysonl and See also:Samuel Collins2 cultivated the same See also:department with diligence and success. Grew has left an interesting account of the anatomical peculiarities of the intestinal canal in various animals; Tyson, in the dissection of a See also:porpoise, an See also:opossum and an orang outang, adduces some valuable illustrations of the comparative See also:differences between the structure of the human body and that of the lower animals; See also:Collins coffins. has the merit of conceiving, and executing on an enlarged See also:plan, a comprehensive system, embodying all the information then extant (1685). With the aid of Tyson and his own researches, which were both extensive and accurate, he composed a system of anatomical knowledge in which he not only gives ample and accurate descriptions of the structure of the human body, and the various morbid changes to which the organs are liable, but illustrates the whole by accurate and interesting sketches of the peculiarities of the lower animals. The matter of this work is so excellent that it can only be ascribed to ignorance that it has received so little attention. Though regarded as a compilation, and though indeed much of the human anatomy is derived from Vesalius, it has the advantage of the works published on the continent at that time, that it embodies most of the valuable facts derived from Malpighi, Willis and Vieussens. The Comparative Anatomy is almost all original, the result of personal research and dissection; and the pathological observations, though occasionally tinged with the spirit of the times, show the author to have been endowed with the See also:powers of observation and judicious reflexion in no ordinary degree. About this time also we recognize the first attempts to study the minute constitution of the tissues, by the See also:combination of the microscope and the effects of chemical agents. Bone furnished the first instance in which this method was put in use; and though Gagliardi, who undertook the inquiry, had fallen into some mistakes which it required the observation of Malpighi to rectify, this did not deter Clopton Havers3 and Nesbitt," in England, and Courtial, H. L. See also:Duhamel-Dumonceau and Delasone, and afterwards Herissant, in France, from resuming the same See also:train of investigation. The mistakes into which these anatomists See also:fell belong to the imperfect method of inquiry. The facts which they ascertained have been verified by recent experiment, and constitute no unessential part of our knowledge of the structure of bone.
Ten years after the publication of the work of Collins, See also:Ridley,5 another English anatomist, distinguished himself by a monograph (1695) on the brain, which, though not See also:free from errors, contains, nevertheless, some valuable observations. Ridley is the first
1 Tyson was a graduate both of Oxford and Cambridge. He was reader of anatomy at Surgeons' See also: 1761) studied at Leiden and practised as a hysician in London. See also:Humphrey Ridley (1653-1708) was a London physician who studied at Leiden. 934 who distinguishes by name the restiform processes, or the posterior pyramidal eminences. He recognized the figure of the four eminences in the human subject; he remarked the mammillary bodies; and he discovered the sinus which passes under his name. Raymond Vieussens, by the publication of his great work on neurography in 1684, threw new light on the configuration and Vieussens. structure of the brain, the spinal cord and the nerves; and gave a description of the arrangement and distribution of the latter more precise than heretofore. Of the formation and connexions of the sympathetic nerve especially he gave views which have been generally adopted by subsequent anatomists. His new arrangement of the vessels, published in 1705, contains several curious opinions. His observations on the structure of the heart, published in 1706, and enlarged in 1715, exhibit the first correct views of the intimate structure of an organ which afterwards was most fully developed by the labours of G. M. Lancisi and J. B. Senac. To the same period (1685–1697) belong the rival publications of G. Bidlool and William See also:Cowper, the latter of whom, however, stained a reputation otherwise good by See also:publishing as his own the engravings of the former. Cowper further distinguished himself by a minute account of the urethral glands; already known to Columbus and Mery; by a good description of the intestinal glands, discovered by Brunner and Peyer; and by demonstrating the communication of the arteries and veins of the mesentery. The anatomical genius of Italy, which had slumbered since the death of Malpighi, was destined once more to revive in Lancisi, A. M. Valsalva, and his illustrious pupils G. D. Santorini and J. B. See also:Morgagni. Valsalva especially distinguished himself by his description of the structure of the ear, which, in possessing still greater precision and minuteness than that of Duverney, is valuable in setting the example of rendering anatomy altogether Santorini. a science of description. Santorini, who was professor at Venice, was no unworthy friend of Valsalva and Morgagni. His anatomical observations, which relate to the muscles of the See also:face, the brain and several of the nerves, the ducts of the lachrymal gland, the See also:nose and its cavities, the larynx, the viscera of the chest and belly, and the organs of generation in the two sexes, furnish beautiful See also:models of essays, distinguished for perspicuity, precision and novelty, above anything which had then appeared. These observations, indeed, which bear the impress of accurate observation and clear conception, may be safely compared with any anatomical writings which have appeared since. Those on the brain are particularly interesting. Morgagni. Morgagni, though chiefly known as a pathological anatomist, did not neglect the healthy structure. His Adversaria, which appeared between 1706 and 1719, and his Epistles, published in 1728, contain a series of observations to rectify the mistakes of previous anatomists, and to determine the characters of the healthy structure of many parts of the human body. Many parts he describes anew, and indicates facts not previously observed. All his remarks show how well he knew what true anatomical description ought to be. In this respect, indeed, the three anatomists now mentioned may be said to have anticipated their contemporaries nearly a century; for, while other authors were satisfied with giving loose and inaccurate or meagre notices of parts, with much fanciful supposition, Valsalva, Santorini and Morgagni laboured to determine with precision the anatomical characters of the parts which they describe. The same character is due to J. B. See also:Winslow (1669–1760), a native of See also:Denmark, but, as pupil and successor of Duverney, as Winslow. well as a convert to Catholicism, naturalized in France, and finally professor of anatomy at the Royal Gardens. His exposition of the structure of the human body is distinguished for being not only the first treatise of descriptive anatomy, divested of physiological details and hypothetical explanations foreign to the subject, but for being a close description derived from actual objects, without reference to the writings of previous 1Bidloo was a Dutch anatomist and Cowper a London surgeon. [HISTORY anatomists. About the same time. W. See also:Cheselden in London, the first Alexander See also:Monro in Edinburgh, and B. S. Albinus in Leiden, contributed by their several treatises to render anatomy still more precise as a descriptive science. The Osteographia of the first-mentioned was of much use in directing attention to the study of the skeleton and the morbid changes to which it is liable. This work, however, magnificent as it was, was excelled by that of Albinus, who in 1747 published engravings, executed Albinus. by See also:Jan Wandelaar (1691-1759), of the bones and muscles, which had never been surpassed in accuracy of outline or beauty of execution. The several labours of Albinus, indeed, constitute an important era in the history of the science. He was the first who classified and exhibited the muscles in a proper arrangement, and applied to them a nomenclature which is still retained by the consent of the best anatomists. He gives a luminous account of the arteries and veins of the intestines, represents with singular fidelity and beauty the bones of the foetus, inquires into the structure of the skin and the cause of its See also:colour in different races; represents the changes incident to the womb in different periods of pregnancy, and describes the relations of the thoracic duct and the vena azygos with the contiguous parts. Besides. these large and magnificent works, illustrated by the most beautiful engravings, six books of Academical Annotations were the fruits of his long and assiduous cultivation of anatomy. These contain valuable remarks on the second structure and morbid deviations of numerous parts of the human body. Albinus found a worthy successor in his pupil See also:Albert von Haller (1708–1777), who, with a mind imbued with every department of literature and science, directed his chief atten- tion, nevertheless, to the cultivation of anatomical and physiological knowledge. Having undertaken at an early age (twenty-one) to illustrate,, with commentaries, the physiological prelections of his preceptor H. See also:Boerhaave, he devoted himself assiduously to the perusal of every work which could tend to facilitate his purpose; and, as he found numerous erroneous or imperfect statements, and many deficiencies to See also:supply, he under-took an extensive course of dissection of human and animal bodies to obtain the requisite information. During the seventeen years he was professor at See also:Gottingen, he dissected 400 bodies, and inspected their organs with the utmost care. The result of these assiduous labours appeared at intervals in the form of See also:dissertations by himself, or under the name of some one of his pupils, finally published in a collected shape between 1746 and 1751 (Disputations Anatomicae Selectiores), and in eight See also:numbers of most accurate and beautiful engravings, representing the most important parts of the human body, e.g. the diaphragm, the uterus, ovaries and vagina, the arteries of the different regions and organs, with learned and critical explanatory observations. He verified the observations that in the foetus the testicles See also:lie in the abdomen, and showed that their descent into the scrotum may be complicated with the formation of congenital hernia. Some years after, when he had retired from his academical duties at Gottingen, he published between 1757 and 1765 the large and elaborate work which, with singular modesty, he styled Elements of Physiology. This work, though professedly devoted to physiology, rendered, nevertheless, the most essentially services to anatomy. Haller, drawing an accurate line of distinction between the two, gave the most clear, precise and complete descriptions of the situation, position, figure, component parts and minute structure of the different organs and their appendages, The results of previous and coeval inquiry, obtained by extensive See also:reading, he sedulously verified by personal observation; and though he never rejected facts stated on credible authorities, he in all cases laboured to ascertain their real value by experiment. The anatomical descriptions are on this account not only the most valuable part of his work, but the most valuable that had then or for a long time after appeared. It is painful, nevertheless, to think that the very form in which this work is composed, with copious and scrupulous reference to authorities, made it be regarded as a compilation only; and that the author was compelled to show, by a list of his personal researches, that the most learned work ever given to the physiologist was also the most abundant in original information. With the researches of Haller it is proper to notice those of his contemporaries, John See also:Frederick Meckel, J. N. Lieberkuhn, and his pupil John See also:Godfrey Zinn. The first, who was .professor of anatomy at See also:Berlin, described the Casserian ganglion, the first pair of nerves and its distribution and that of the facial nerves generally, and discovered the spheno-palatine ganglion (1748–17J1). He made some original and judicious observations on the See also:tissue of the skin and the mucous net (1753–1757); and above all, he recognized the connexion of the lymphatic vessels with the veins—a doctrine which, after long neglect, was revived by See also:Vincent Fohmann (1794–1837) and See also:Lippi. He also collected several valuable observations on the morbid states of the heart and brain. Lieberkuhn published in 1745 a dissertation on the villi and glands of the small intestines. Zinn, who was professor of medicine at Gottingen, published a classical treatise on the eye (1755), which demonstrated at once the defects of previous inquiries, and how much it was possible to elucidate, by accurate research and precise description, the structure of one of the most important organs of the human frame. It was republished after his death by H. A. Wrisberg (178o). About the same time J. Weitbrecht gave a copious and minute account of the ligaments, and J. Lieutaud (1703–1780), who had already laboured to rectify many errors in anatomy, described with care the structure and relations of the heart and its cavities, and rendered the anatomy of the bladder very precise, by describing the triangular space and the mammillary eminence at its neck. The study of the minute anatomy of the tissues, which had originally been commenced by Leeuwenhoek, Malpighi and Ruysch, began at this period to attract more general attention. Karl See also:August von See also:Bergen had already demonstrated (1732) the general distribution of cellular membrane, and showed that it not only incloses every part of the animal frame, but forms the basis of every organ—a doctrine which was adopted and still more fully See also:expanded (1757) by his friend Haller, in opposition to what was asserted by Albinus, who maintains that each part has a proper tissue. William See also:Hunter at the same time gave a clear and W. Hunter. ingenious statement of the difference between cellular membrane and adipose tissue (1757), in which he maintained the general distribution of the former, and represented it as forming the serous membranes, and regulating their physiological and pathological properties—doctrines which were after-wards confirmed by his brother John Hunter. A few years after, the department of general anatomy first assumed a substantial form in the systematic view of the membranes and their mutual connexions traced by See also:Andrew Bonn of Amsterdam. In his A. Bonn. inaugural dissertation De Continuationibus Membra- narum, published at Leiden in 1763, this author, after some preliminary observations on membranes in general and their structure, and an exposition of that of the skin, traces its transition into the mucous membranes and their several divisions. He then explains the distribution of the cellular membrane, the aponeurotic expansions, and the periosteum and perichondrium, by either of which, he shows, every bone of the skeleton is invested and connected. He finally gives a very distinct view of the arrangement of the internal membranes of cavities, those named serous and fibro-serous, and the manner of their distribution over the contained organs. This See also:essay, which is a happy example of generalization, is remarkable for the interesting general views of the structure of the animal body which it exhibits; and to Bonn belongs the merit of sketching the first outlines of that system which it was reserved for the genius of M. F. X. See also:Bichat to complete and embellish. Lastly, T. de See also:Borden, in an elaborate essay (1767) on the mucous tissue, or cellular organ, as he terms it, brought forward some interesting views of the constitution, 'nature and extent of the cellular membrane. Though anatomy was hitherto cultivated with much success as illustrating the natural history and morbid states of the human body, yet little had been done for the elucidation of See also:local diseases, and the surgical means by which they may be successfully treated. The idea of applying anatomical knowledge directly to thispurpose appears to have originated with Bernardin See also:Genga, a Roman surgeon, who published in 1672, at Rome, a work entitled Surgical Anatomy, or the Anatomical History of the Bones and Muscles of the Human Body, with the Description of the Blood-vessels. This work, which reached a second edition in 1687, is highly creditable to the author, who appears to have studied intimately the mutual relations of different parts. It is not improbable that the example of Genga led J. Palfyn, a surgeon at See also:Ghent, to undertake a similar task about thirty years after (1718-1726). For this, however, he was by no means well qualified; and the work of Palfyn, though bearing the name of Surgical Anatomy, is a miserable compilation, meagre in details, inaccurate in description, and altogether unworthy of the honour of being republished, as it afterwards was by Antony Petit. While these two authors, however, were usefully employed in showing what was wanted for the surgeon, others were occupied in the collection of new and more accurate facts. Albinus, indeed, ever assiduous, had, in his account of the operations of See also:Rau, given some good sketches of the relative anatomy of the bladder and urethra; and Cheselden had already, in his mode of cutting into the urinary bladder, shown the necessity of an exact knowledge of the relations of contiguous parts. The first decided application, however, of this species of anatomical research it was reserved for a Dutch anatomist of the 18th century to make. Peter See also:Camper, professor of anatomy at Amsterdam, published in 176o and 1762 his anatomico- camper. pathological demonstrations of the'parts of the human See also:arm and pelvis, of the diseases incident to them, and the mode of relieving them by operation, and explained with great clearness the situation of the blood-vessels, nerves and important muscles. His remarks on the lateral operation of lithotomy, which contain all that was then known on the subject, are exceedingly interesting and valuable to the surgeon. It appears, further, that he was the first who examined anatomically the mechanism of ruptures, his delineations of which were published in 18o1 by S. T. Sommerring. Camper also wrote some important See also:memoirs on Comparative Anatomy, and he was the author of a well-known work on the Relations of Anatomy to the See also:Fine Arts. The attention of anatomists was now directed to the elucidation of the most obscure and least explored parts of the human frame —the lymphatic vessels and the nerves. Although, since the first discovery of the former by Aselli, Rudbeck and Pecquet, much had been done, especially by Ruysch, Nuck, Meckel and Haller, many points, notwithstanding, relating to their origin and distribution in particular organs, and in the several classes of animals, were imperfectly ascertained or entirely unknown. William Hunter investigated their arrangement, and W. J. the doctrine that they are absorbents; u and proposed ~' ~ Hunter. and John Hunter, who undertook to demonstrate the truth of this hypothesis by experiment, discovered, in 1758, lymphatics in the neck in birds. As the doctrine required the existence of this order of vessels, not only in quadrupeds and birds but in See also:reptiles and fishes, the inquiry attracted attention among the pupils of Hunter; and William Hewsonl at length communicated, in See also:December 1768, to the Hewson. Royal Society of London an account of the See also:lac teals and lymphatics in birds, fishes and reptiles, as he had discovered and demonstrated them. The subject was about the same time investigated by the second Alexander Monro, who indeed claimed the merit of discovering these vessels in the classes of animals now mentioned. But whatever researches this anatomist may have instituted, Hewson, by communicating his observations to the Royal Society, must be allowed to possess the strongest as well as the clearest claim to discovery. The same author, in 1774, gave the first complete account of the anatomical peculiarities of the lymphatic system in man and other animals, and thereby supplied an important See also:gap in this department. Hewson is the first who distinguishes the lymphatics into two orders--the superficial and the deep—both in the extremities and in the internal organs. He also studied the structure of the 1 Hewson was a partner with William Hunter iii the See also:Windmill See also:Street School of Anatomy. 936 intestinal villi, in which he verified the observations of Lieberkuhn; and he made many important observations on the corpuscles of the lymph and blood. He finally applied his anatomical discoveries to explain many of the physiological and pathological phenomena of the animal body. Ten years after, John See also:Sheldon, another pupil of Hunter, gave a second history and description of the lymphatics, which, though divested of the See also:charm of novelty, contains many interesting anatomical facts. He also examined the structure of the villi.
Lastly, See also:Cruikshank;l in 1786, published a valuable history of the anatomy of the lymphatic system, in which he maintains the accuracy of the Hunterian doctrine, that the lymphatics are the only absorbents; gave a more minute account than heretofore of these vessels, of their coats and valves; and explained the structure of the lymphatic glands. He also injected the villi, and examined them microscopically, verifying most of the observations of Lieberkuhn. The origin of the lymphatics he maintains rather by inference than direct demonstration. To these three works, though in other respects very excellent, it is a considerable objection that the anatomical descriptions are much mixed with hypothetical See also:speculation and reasonings on properties, and that the facts are by no means always distinguished from mere matters of opinion. At the same time J. G. See also:Haase published an account of the lymphatics of the skin and intestines, and the plexiform nets of the pelvis.
To complete this sketch of the history of the anatomy of the lymphatic system, it may be added that See also:Paolo See also:Mascagni, Mascagnl. who had been engaged from the year 1777 to 1781
in the same train of investigation, first demonstrated to his pupils several curious facts relating to the anatomy of the lymphatic system. When at See also:Florence in 1782 he made several preparations, at the See also:request of Peter See also:Leopold, See also:grand See also:duke of See also:Tuscany; and when the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris announced the anatomy of this system for their See also:prize essay appointed for See also: In his account of the vessels and their valves he confirms some of Hewson's observations and rectifies others. Their origin he proves by inference much in the same manner as Cruikshank; but he anticipates this author in the account of the glands, and he gives the most minute description of the superficial and deep lymphatics, both in the members and in the internal organs. General accounts of the nerves had been given with various degrees of accuracy by Willis, Vieussens, Winslow, and the first Monro; and the subject had been much rectified and improved by the indefatigable Haller. The first example of minute descriptive neurography was given in 1748 by John Frederick Meckel, whose account of the fifth pair and of the nerves of the face will long remain a lasting proof of accuracy and research. The same subject was investigated in 1765 by See also:Hirsch and in 1777 by Wrisberg. In 1766 Metzger examined the origin, distribution and termination of the first pair—a point which was afterwards very minutely treated by A. Scarpa2 in his anatomical disquisitions, published in 178o; and the internal nerves of the nostrils were examined in 1791 by Haase. The optic nerve, which had been studied originally by Varoli, and afterwards by Wry, Duvemey, J. F. Henkel, Moeller, Hein and Kaldschmid, was examined with extreme accuracy, with the other nerves of the organ of vision, by Zinn in his elaborate 1 W. Cruikshank followed W. Hunter as lecturer at the Windmill Street school. ' Scarpa was professor of anatomy at See also:Modena and Pavia.[HISTORY treatise. The phrenic nerves and the oesophageal branches of the vagus were studied by Haase; the phrenic, the abdominal and the pharyngeal nerves, by Wrisberg; those of the heart most minutely by Andersch; and the origins, formation and distribution of the intercostal nerves, by Iwanov, C. G. See also:Ludwig, and Girardi. The labours of these anatomists, however, were eclipsed by the splendid works of Walter (1783) on the nerves of the chest and belly; and those of Scarpa (1794) on the distribution of the eighth pair and splanchnic nerves in general. In minuteness of description and in beauty of See also:engraving these works have not yet been equalled, and will never perhaps be surpassed. About the same time, Scarpa, so distinguished in every branch of anatomical research, investigated the minute structure of the ganglions and plexuses. The anatomy of the brain itself was also studied (178o) with great attention by the second Monro, M. V. G. Malacarne and Vicq d'Azyr. Lastly, the anatomy of the gravid uterus, which had been originally studied by Albinus, See also:Roederer and Smellie, was again illustrated (1774) most completely by William Hunter, whose engravings will remain a lasting memorial of scientific zeal and See also:artistic talent. The perfection which anatomical science attained in the last ten years of the 18th and during the 19th century is evinced not only in the improved character of the systems published by anatomists, but in the enormous advance which has taken place in the knowledge of the minute structure of the animal tissues, of the development of the tissues and organs, and of the modifications in form and structure exhibited by various See also:groups of animals. The first who gave a good modern system was R. B. See also:Sabatier; but his work was speedily eclipsed by the superior merits of the treatises of Sommerring, Bichat and Portal. The excellent work by Samuel Thomas Sommerring, originally published in the See also:German language, between the years 1791 and See also:Sommer-1796; then in the Latin language, between the years ring. 1794 and 1800; and in a second edition in the German language in 1800 and 18o1, maintaining the high character which it first possessed for clear arrangement, accurate description and general precision, was, between the years 1841 and 1844, republished in eight volumes at Leipzig by Th. L. W. Bischoff, F. G. J. See also:Henle, E. H. Huschke, Theile, G. G. Valentin, See also:Vogel, and R. See also:Wagner, with suitable additions, and a large amount of new and accurate information. In this edition See also:Rudolph Wagner gives, in the first division of the first See also:volume, the life, correspondence and literary writings of Sommerring; and in the second volume the anatomy of the bones and ligaments. The third volume contains the anatomy of the muscles and the vascular system by Theile. G. G. Valentin devotes one volume, the fourth, to the minute anatomy of the nervous system and its parts, as disclosed by careful examination by the microscope; and it must be allowed that the author has been at great pains to present just views of the true anatomy of the brain, the spinal cord, the nervous branches and the ganglia. In the fifth volume, E. H. Huschke of See also:Jena gives the anatomical history of the viscera and the organs of the senses, a department which had been left in some degree incomplete in the original, but for one division of which the author had left useful materials in his large figures already mentioned. In the sixth volume, an entire and complete system of general anatomy, deduced from personal observation and that of other careful observers, the materials being in general new, and in all instances confirmed and rectified is given by F. G. J. Henle. The seventh volume contains the history of the process of development in See also:mammalia and man, by Th. L. W. Bischoff. The eighth volume treats of the pathological anatomy of the human body, by Julius Vogel, but contains only the first division, relating to the generalities of the subject. This, which is probably the most accurate as it is the most elaborate system of anatomical knowledge up to the date of its publication in 1844, was translated into the French language by See also:Jourdan, and published in 1846 under the name of Encyclopedia anatomique. The eighth volume was translated into English in the year 1847. cruiksnank. 19th century. The Anatomie generale of M. F. X. Bichat is a monument of his philosophical genius which will last as long as the structure etchat. and functions of the human body are objects of interest. His Anatomie descriptive is distinguished by clear and natural arrangement, precise and accurate description, and the general ingenuity with which the subject is treated. The physiological observations are in general correct, often novel, and always highly interesting. It is unfortunate, however, that the ingenious author was cut off prematurely during the preparation of the third volume. The later volumes are, however, pervaded with the general spirit by which the others are impressed, and are highly creditable to the learning, the judgment and the diligence of P. J. Roux and M. F. R. See also:Buisson. The system of A. Portal is a valuable and correct See also:digest of anatomical and pathological knowledge, which, in exact literary information, is worthy of the author of the Histoire de l'anatomie et de la chirurgie, and, in accuracy of descriptive details, shows that Portal trusted not to the labours of his predecessors only. A. See also:Boyer published in 1803 a complete treatise on descriptive anatomy. H. See also:Cloquet formed, on the model of the Anatomie descriptive of Bichat, a system in which he avails himself of the literature and precision of Sommerring and the details of Portal. An English translation of this work was prepared by Dr See also:Robert See also:Knox. Jean See also:Cruveilhier published in 1834—1835 a good general treatise on descriptive anatomy, which was translated into English, and published as a part of The Library of Medicine. Cruveilhier's treatise has passed through several editions. The most elaborate work of the French school is the great treatise of M. J. Bourgery, consisting of four divisions,on descriptive, general, surgical and philosophical anatomy (1832—18J4). These are beautifully illustrated. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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