The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 1552 anatomy was postulated as one of the subjects at the Protestant Academic Gymnasium. This demand was satisfied in 1568, 10 years after the opening of the school. Auditorium anatomicum, one of the early institutions of its kind in Europe, became a research centre before 1616 and its founding was closely connected with the activity of Joachim Oelhaf (1570–1630). The first (supposedly) public dissection of a man’s head took place in 1605. In 1613 Oelhaf conducted an autopsy on a child with multiple congenital defects, which was probably the first public dissection in Central Europe. Auditorium’s further development is attributed to Laurentius ...
The anatomical theatre played a pivotal role in the evolution of medical education, allowing student...
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
Christoph Gottwald (1636–1700) was one of the most important Danzig doctors and collectors to live i...
The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 15...
The first both in Gdansk and in Central Europe alleged public autopsy was performed by Joachim Oelha...
Of enduring historical and contemporary interest, the anatomy theater is where students of the human...
The Institute of Anatomy and Anthropology (AAI) of Riga Stradiņš University (RSU) displays a remarka...
Human anatomy dissection represented a cornerstone in the evolution of medicine and modern scientifi...
The spread of the idea that the human body should be learned from cadavers, especially under the lea...
In 1890 Professor of Anatomy August Antonius Rauber founded a museum of anatomy at the Old Anatomica...
The University of Padua is one of the most ancient in the world, being founded in 1222, and the most...
By the 17th century, human dissections became an important feature in European medical schools, and ...
In 1772 duke Francesco III d'Este promoted the reform of University enacting the Constitutions for t...
Medical collections in Tartu Old Anatomical Theatre – from August Rauber's Anatomy Museum to a multi...
The anatomical theatre played a pivotal role in the evolution of medical education, allowing student...
The anatomical theatre played a pivotal role in the evolution of medical education, allowing student...
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
Christoph Gottwald (1636–1700) was one of the most important Danzig doctors and collectors to live i...
The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 15...
The first both in Gdansk and in Central Europe alleged public autopsy was performed by Joachim Oelha...
Of enduring historical and contemporary interest, the anatomy theater is where students of the human...
The Institute of Anatomy and Anthropology (AAI) of Riga Stradiņš University (RSU) displays a remarka...
Human anatomy dissection represented a cornerstone in the evolution of medicine and modern scientifi...
The spread of the idea that the human body should be learned from cadavers, especially under the lea...
In 1890 Professor of Anatomy August Antonius Rauber founded a museum of anatomy at the Old Anatomica...
The University of Padua is one of the most ancient in the world, being founded in 1222, and the most...
By the 17th century, human dissections became an important feature in European medical schools, and ...
In 1772 duke Francesco III d'Este promoted the reform of University enacting the Constitutions for t...
Medical collections in Tartu Old Anatomical Theatre – from August Rauber's Anatomy Museum to a multi...
The anatomical theatre played a pivotal role in the evolution of medical education, allowing student...
The anatomical theatre played a pivotal role in the evolution of medical education, allowing student...
The structure of the human body and its parts is of obvious relevance in medicine, but it has also p...
Christoph Gottwald (1636–1700) was one of the most important Danzig doctors and collectors to live i...