Galen’s Commentaries on the Hippocratic Epidemics constitute one of the most detailed studies of Hippocratic medicine from Antiquity. The Arabic translation of the Commentaries by Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq (d. c. 873) is of crucial importance because it preserves large sections now lost in Greek, and because it helped to establish an Arabic clinical literature. The present contribution investigate the translation of this seminal work into Syriac and Arabic. It provides a first survey of the manuscript tradition, and explores how physicians in the medieval Muslim world drew on it both to teach medicine to students, and to develop a framework for their own clinical research
Although over two dozen Arabic commentaries on the Canon of Medicine were composed between the twelf...
In the last two years, we have been working on a Graeco-Arabic edition of Book IX of Galen’s On Simp...
To summarise our findings, the Hippocratic Epidemics case reports is an example of a text whose inte...
Hunayn ibn Ishaq's Arabic translation of Galen's commentary on the Hippocratic Epidemics is an inval...
The present volume offers the first critical edition of Book 1 of the medieval Arabic translation of...
The present volume offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Galen's C...
This two-volume monograph offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Ga...
This two-volume monograph offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Ga...
International audienceGalen was the basis of medical learning in the Eastern Medieval period. The tr...
The influence of Galen in Islamic countries is associated with the extensive contribution of Greek s...
As a complement and supplement to the various articles in this issue devoted specifically to the man...
This article presents the Syriac Galen Palimpsest’s double history, of both the original manuscript ...
This chapter reconstructs the Latin tradition of Galen and its development from Late Antiquity to th...
Andalusia played remarkable role in disseminating Arab system of medicine and pharmacy to rest of Eu...
In the medieval history of Islamic medicine sources, there is a lot of information regarding the tra...
Although over two dozen Arabic commentaries on the Canon of Medicine were composed between the twelf...
In the last two years, we have been working on a Graeco-Arabic edition of Book IX of Galen’s On Simp...
To summarise our findings, the Hippocratic Epidemics case reports is an example of a text whose inte...
Hunayn ibn Ishaq's Arabic translation of Galen's commentary on the Hippocratic Epidemics is an inval...
The present volume offers the first critical edition of Book 1 of the medieval Arabic translation of...
The present volume offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Galen's C...
This two-volume monograph offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Ga...
This two-volume monograph offers the first critical edition of the medieval Arabic translation of Ga...
International audienceGalen was the basis of medical learning in the Eastern Medieval period. The tr...
The influence of Galen in Islamic countries is associated with the extensive contribution of Greek s...
As a complement and supplement to the various articles in this issue devoted specifically to the man...
This article presents the Syriac Galen Palimpsest’s double history, of both the original manuscript ...
This chapter reconstructs the Latin tradition of Galen and its development from Late Antiquity to th...
Andalusia played remarkable role in disseminating Arab system of medicine and pharmacy to rest of Eu...
In the medieval history of Islamic medicine sources, there is a lot of information regarding the tra...
Although over two dozen Arabic commentaries on the Canon of Medicine were composed between the twelf...
In the last two years, we have been working on a Graeco-Arabic edition of Book IX of Galen’s On Simp...
To summarise our findings, the Hippocratic Epidemics case reports is an example of a text whose inte...