Dían Cécht is the semi-divine god of healing in the ancient Irish mythological cycle. He was the son of Dagda, the father of the gods who like Thor, carried a great hammer. Dian Cécht was grandfather to the almost universal Celtic deity Lugh. (Lúnasa, Lugudunum, Lyon, Lleu, Lugoues, Lucubo etc.,etc.) Dian Cécht tended Nuada after he lost his arm at the Battle of Moytura and made him a silver prosthesis. In time, Dian Cécht’s son Miach was also a great healer, apparently more into physic than surgery. He healed Nuada completely by physic. In a prolonged fit of jealous rage Dian Cécht killed Miach. 365 healing herbs grew from his grave which were gathered and catalogued by Airmed, Dian Céchts daughter and Miach’s sister. Dian Cécht threw the...
Heartwater (previously cowdriosis) is a disease caused by a rickettsia, Ehrlichia ruminantium (previ...
In 1920s colonial India, an enthusiastic group of expatriate British officials occupied themselves b...
This lecture focuses on the responsibilities – indeed, duties – of an historian today. It asks about...
At the end of the 21st century B.C., after the Akkadian Empire collapsed, the political situation in...
The start of the Swiss veterinary connection dates back to the late 19th century when a shortage of ...
The history of veterinary science and education in South Africa is embedded within the colonial hist...
The Faculty of Veterinary Science of the Medical University of the Southern Africa (MEDUNSA) was a c...
The devastating effects of rinderpest in Europe in the 18th century resulted in a call from Professo...
Research into the lost and hidden treasures of the historical collections provides insights into the...
For the purposes of this address, tropical diseases are broadly defined as animal diseases and toxic...
Veterinarians in South Africa today are inclined to think their profession started with Arnold Theil...
Veterinarians trained in Europe dominated the research fraternity in South Africa up to the Second W...
Although bubonic plague is not one of the major veterinary diseases of South Africa, it played an im...
Microbial techniques and apparatus had been sufficiently developed by the second half of the 19th ce...
Between 13,000 and 2,500 BC humans domesticated dogs, cats, cattle, goats, horses, and sheep from th...
Heartwater (previously cowdriosis) is a disease caused by a rickettsia, Ehrlichia ruminantium (previ...
In 1920s colonial India, an enthusiastic group of expatriate British officials occupied themselves b...
This lecture focuses on the responsibilities – indeed, duties – of an historian today. It asks about...
At the end of the 21st century B.C., after the Akkadian Empire collapsed, the political situation in...
The start of the Swiss veterinary connection dates back to the late 19th century when a shortage of ...
The history of veterinary science and education in South Africa is embedded within the colonial hist...
The Faculty of Veterinary Science of the Medical University of the Southern Africa (MEDUNSA) was a c...
The devastating effects of rinderpest in Europe in the 18th century resulted in a call from Professo...
Research into the lost and hidden treasures of the historical collections provides insights into the...
For the purposes of this address, tropical diseases are broadly defined as animal diseases and toxic...
Veterinarians in South Africa today are inclined to think their profession started with Arnold Theil...
Veterinarians trained in Europe dominated the research fraternity in South Africa up to the Second W...
Although bubonic plague is not one of the major veterinary diseases of South Africa, it played an im...
Microbial techniques and apparatus had been sufficiently developed by the second half of the 19th ce...
Between 13,000 and 2,500 BC humans domesticated dogs, cats, cattle, goats, horses, and sheep from th...
Heartwater (previously cowdriosis) is a disease caused by a rickettsia, Ehrlichia ruminantium (previ...
In 1920s colonial India, an enthusiastic group of expatriate British officials occupied themselves b...
This lecture focuses on the responsibilities – indeed, duties – of an historian today. It asks about...