This study presents the first full translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Morbi Artificum or Occupational diseases, submitted by Nicholas Skragge in 1765. It consists of an essay that places the dissertation in historical and scientific context and of the translation. Skragge's thesis has not only significance in the history of occupational medicine but also provides a perspective on Linnaeus' thinking on dietetics. Skragge's doctoral thesis is one of the 186 academic dissertations defended by students of Carl Linnaeus. Prior to the present study, only three of these 186 dissertations have been translated from Latin to English in our own times. The first extensive compendium on occupational diseases by Bernardino Ram...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 9, 1785, p. 131-142.Library of Congress collect...
Bernardino Ramazzini, considerado el padre de la medicina del trabajo por haber escrito el primer tr...
Scurvy was encountered oft en in the early modern era in connection with the absence of vitamin C on...
This study presents the first full translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mo...
This study presents the first full translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mo...
This review opens with the most important examples from the history of medicine until the end of the...
This review opens with the most important examples from the history of medicine until the end of the...
This study presents the first translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mundus ...
Historians claimed that the Diatriba ‘is to the history of occupational diseases what Vesalius’s boo...
Čovjek provodi radeći veći dio svojeg svijesnog života, a to mu je prijeka potreba, kako za postignu...
Linnaean dissertation no. 103. Classification of human diseases. Defended in 1759 by Johan Schroder
Bernardino Ramazzini is the recognized father of occupational medicine. His work De morbis artificum...
Ramazzini's De Morbis Artificum Diatriba (Diseases of workers), published in 1700, has been describ...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 7, ed. 1, 1769; ed. 2, 1789, p. 197-213; and Gi...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 5, ed. 1, 1760; ed. 2, 1788, p. 133-147. cf. Hu...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 9, 1785, p. 131-142.Library of Congress collect...
Bernardino Ramazzini, considerado el padre de la medicina del trabajo por haber escrito el primer tr...
Scurvy was encountered oft en in the early modern era in connection with the absence of vitamin C on...
This study presents the first full translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mo...
This study presents the first full translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mo...
This review opens with the most important examples from the history of medicine until the end of the...
This review opens with the most important examples from the history of medicine until the end of the...
This study presents the first translation from Latin to English of the Linnaean dissertation Mundus ...
Historians claimed that the Diatriba ‘is to the history of occupational diseases what Vesalius’s boo...
Čovjek provodi radeći veći dio svojeg svijesnog života, a to mu je prijeka potreba, kako za postignu...
Linnaean dissertation no. 103. Classification of human diseases. Defended in 1759 by Johan Schroder
Bernardino Ramazzini is the recognized father of occupational medicine. His work De morbis artificum...
Ramazzini's De Morbis Artificum Diatriba (Diseases of workers), published in 1700, has been describ...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 7, ed. 1, 1769; ed. 2, 1789, p. 197-213; and Gi...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 5, ed. 1, 1760; ed. 2, 1788, p. 133-147. cf. Hu...
Also published in Linné's Amoenitates academicae, v. 9, 1785, p. 131-142.Library of Congress collect...
Bernardino Ramazzini, considerado el padre de la medicina del trabajo por haber escrito el primer tr...
Scurvy was encountered oft en in the early modern era in connection with the absence of vitamin C on...