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Tag Archives: medicine

Live Broadcast of Vesalius Lecture

18 Thursday Sep 2014

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anatomy, Andreas Vesalius, art, exhibition, exhibitions, Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, lecture, Mark T. Nielsen, medicine, reception, Renaissance, science, The University of Utah, tour, Vesalius

Watch the live broadcast of tonight’s lecture, Renaissance Man: The Art and Science of Andreas Vesalius.

http://lib.utah.edu/services/knowledge-commons/live-broadcast/
Mark Nielsen 8x11 copy 2

September 18, 2014

Lecture: Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, Level 1, 6:30 PM

Reception: Special Collections Gallery, Level 4, 7:30 PM

A 45 minute tour of the exhibitions will begin at 5:30 at the west entrance, Level 1, of the J. Willard Marriott Library.

Learn more about Mark Nielsen.

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Join Us!

17 Wednesday Sep 2014

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anatomy, Andreas Vesalius, art, Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, Mark T. Nielsen, medicine, Renaissance, science, The University of Utah, Vesalius

Mark Nielsen 8x11 copy 2

September 18, 2014

Lecture: Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, Level 1, 6:30 PM

Reception: Special Collections Gallery, Level 4, 7:30 PM

A 45 minute tour of the exhibitions will begin at 5:30 at the west entrance, Level 1, of the J. Willard Marriott Library.

Learn more about Mark Nielsen.

alluNeedSingleLine

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You Are Invited

15 Monday Sep 2014

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Tags

anatomy, Andreas Vesalius, education, exhibition, Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, lecture, Mark Nielsen, Mark T. Nielsen, medicine, physician, reception, Renaissance, Special Collections Gallery, The University of Utah, Vesalius

Mark Nielsen 8x11 copy 2

September 18, 2014

Lecture: Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, Level 1, 6:30 PM

Reception: Special Collections Gallery, Level 4, 7:30 PM

A 45 minute tour of the exhibitions will begin at 5:30 at the west entrance, Level 1, of the J. Willard Marriott Library.

Learn more about Mark Nielsen.

alluNeedSingleLine

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Vesalius, Part 1 – Celebrating 500 Years of Innovation

08 Tuesday Jul 2014

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anatomical studies, anatomy, Andreas Vesalius, book design, De Corporis Fabrica, education, Gould Auditorium, J. Willard Marriott Library, Leonardo da Vinci, Mark T. Nielsen, medical texts, medicine, Renaissance, Special Collections Gallery, Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, The University of Utah, William Harvey

vesalius_wall_build-wide_06-12-14

See the J. Willard Marriott Library’s digitized 1555 edition of De humani corporis fabrica.
Learn more about our guest speaker Mark Nielsen.

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Book of the Week – Zuschrift an Seine Zuhoerer Worinnen…

24 Monday Feb 2014

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Branschweig, E.G. von Kleist, electrical condensor, electricity, Halle, Johann Gottlob Krueger, Leyden jar, medicine

Kruger, Zuschrift…, 1744, Title Page
Kruger, Zuschrift…, 1744
Kruger, Zuschrift…, 1744, End Page

Zuschrift an Seine Zuhoerer Worinnen…
Johann Gottlob Krueger (1715-1759)
Halle: C.H. Hemmerde, 1744
First edition
QC516 K7

Johann Krueger was Professor of Medicine at Halle, and later at Branschweig. He was fairly well-known in his day as an electrical experimenter. He was one of the few persons to whom E.G. von Kleist communicated his invention of the Leyden jar (the electrical condensor). Krueger’s interest in electricity was largely in possible medical applications, as suggested in this lecture. This printing of his lecture is unrecorded. The first recorded printing is dated 1745.

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Book of the Week – Dialogo di Galileo Galilei

12 Monday Aug 2013

Posted by rarebooks in Book of the Week

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Tags

astronomy, Copernicus, dialogo, Galileo, heliocentric, Index, Inquisition, Italian, Landini, Latin, mathematics, medicine, Padua, philosophy, Pisa, Ptolemaic, Roman Catholic Church, solar system, telescope, vernacular

Dialogo di Galileo Galilei, 1632, Frontispiece
Dialogo di Galileo Galilei, 1632, Title Page
Dialogo di Galileo Galilei, 1632

Dialogo Di Galileo Galilei Linceo Matematico Sopraordinario Dello Stvdio de Pisa
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Fiorenza: Per Gio Batista Landini, 1632
First edition

Born in Pisa in 1564, Galileo studied medicine, mathematics, and philosophy. In 1592 he was appointed to the Chair of Mathematics in Padua. His early research was mainly on motion, particularly of falling bodies, but he became interested in astronomy. He developed a new type of telescope.

Much of Galileo’s early work proved the theories of Copernicus, of which the Roman Catholic Church disapproved, placing an injunction not to hold or defend Copernican doctrine. Galileo ignored the injunction with the publication of Dialogo.

Galileo’s Dialogo is a scientific and philosophical affirmation of the Copernican heliocentric theory over the earth-centered Ptolemaic theory of the solar system. Written in a literary style, Galileo deliberately chose to write this work in vernacular Italian rather than scholarly Latin in order to reach a mass audience. The topic made Galileo a threat to the authority of the Roman Catholic Church.

It was this book that brought Galileo before the Inquisition in 1633, where he was forced to recant his views. He was put under permanent house arrest. Dialogo was placed on the Index of prohibited book where it remained until 1835. Publication took place between June 1631 and February 1632.  The first printing numbered 1000 copies of 500 pages. This printing sold out before the end of September when it was banned by the Pope. Illustrated. University of Utah copy edges untrimmed.

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Book of the Week – De Historia Stirpivm Commentarii Insignes…

21 Tuesday May 2013

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Albrecht Meyer, botany, Columbian Encounter, De Historia Stirpium, Erfurt University, Fuchsia, German, Greek, Heinrich Fullmaurer, herbals, Ingolstadt, Latin, Leonhart Fuchs, maize, marigold, medicine, Mexico, plague, plants, potato, pumpkin, Renaissance, tobacco, Veit Rudof Speckle, William Morris, woodcuts

Fuchs, 1542, Title page
Fuchs, 1542, Portrait
Fuchs, 1542

De Historia Stirpivm Commentarii Insignes…
Leonhart Fuchs (1501 – 1566)
Basileae: In officina Isingriniana, 1542
QK41 F7 1542

During the European Renaissance, medical treatments were based on botany, but the herbals and other books available to practitioners often inaccurately identified plants. This herbal, The History of Plants, established a new standard of scientific observation and accurate illustration. Leonhart Fuchs compiled his text from various classical sources but added his own field observations.

The remarkably detailed woodcuts, drawn by Heinrich Fullmaurer and Albrecht Meyer and cut by Veit Rudolf Speckle represent the first published illustrations of American plants, including the pumpkin, the marigold, maize, potato, and tobacco – all native to Mexico and introduced into Europe as a consequence of the Columbian Encounter. The plants were identified in Latin, Greek, and German.

Leonhart Fuchs was a child genius, matriculating at Erfurt University at the age of twelve. He went on to take a degree in medicine at Ingolstadt. His medical work during an outbreak of plague in 1529 was outstanding and contributed to an already growing reputation. In his De Historia Stirpium he gave full recognition to his artists by praising them in his preface and publishing their portraits. The artists achieved an extraordinary beauty of line. Their renderings demonstrate the Renaissance shift to the accurate observation and drawing of plants from life.

Fuchs would be immortalized in the lovely genus Fuchsia. English artist and designer William Morris owned a copy of Fuchs’s book and clearly took inspiration from it for some of his own designs.

 

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