The first both in Gdansk and in Central Europe alleged public autopsy was performed by Joachim Oelhaf in February 1613. It was an evidence for Gdansk status as one of the leading anatomical centres in Europe. The aim of the article is to present the history of teaching medicine in Gdansk in early modern era and the eminent anatomists working in Academic Gymnasium of Gdansk. The preserved report of the autopsy of a new-born child with congenital defects is analysed as one of the very first texts in pathological anatomy. The described by Oelhaf case is identified as limb-body wall complex
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
After decades of denial, German academic medicine was reluctant to accept responsibility for its com...
Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician and anatomist, whose work revolutionised anatomy and contri...
The first both in Gdansk and in Central Europe alleged public autopsy was performed by Joachim Oelha...
The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 15...
Wróbel Grzegorz. Wormian bones - a case report of post-mortem examination. Journal of Education, Hea...
Knowledge of human anatomy was acquired through dissections of the human body that may have begun as...
The thesis examines the practice of morbid anatomy as it was articulated and developed in late Georg...
A comprehensive study of osteology remains a cornerstone of current orthopaedic and traumatological ...
This article examines the difficult course of life of formation of the great anatomist of the 17th c...
This study aims to analyze Johann Gottlieb Walter’s biography (1734-1818), a German physician that s...
This article presents the life of Jan Kośmider, a forgotten physician from the beginning of the sixt...
We present a case of cauterisation observed in a skull of an adult female from 8-10th century Pisa
In The Body of Evidence. Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine Francesco Paolo de Ceg...
By the 17th century, human dissections became an important feature in European medical schools, and ...
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
After decades of denial, German academic medicine was reluctant to accept responsibility for its com...
Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician and anatomist, whose work revolutionised anatomy and contri...
The first both in Gdansk and in Central Europe alleged public autopsy was performed by Joachim Oelha...
The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 15...
Wróbel Grzegorz. Wormian bones - a case report of post-mortem examination. Journal of Education, Hea...
Knowledge of human anatomy was acquired through dissections of the human body that may have begun as...
The thesis examines the practice of morbid anatomy as it was articulated and developed in late Georg...
A comprehensive study of osteology remains a cornerstone of current orthopaedic and traumatological ...
This article examines the difficult course of life of formation of the great anatomist of the 17th c...
This study aims to analyze Johann Gottlieb Walter’s biography (1734-1818), a German physician that s...
This article presents the life of Jan Kośmider, a forgotten physician from the beginning of the sixt...
We present a case of cauterisation observed in a skull of an adult female from 8-10th century Pisa
In The Body of Evidence. Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine Francesco Paolo de Ceg...
By the 17th century, human dissections became an important feature in European medical schools, and ...
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
After decades of denial, German academic medicine was reluctant to accept responsibility for its com...
Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician and anatomist, whose work revolutionised anatomy and contri...