Notes on medical scholarship and the broad intellectual milieu in sixteenth-century Portugal.The Portuguese sixteenth-century work on medical deontology de·on·tol·o·gy n. Ethical theory concerned with duties and rights. [Greek deon, deont-, obligation, necessity (from ; see deu-1 in Indo-European roots) + , Dialogo da perfeycam e partes que sam necessarias ao bom medico med·i·co n. 1. A physician. 2. A medical student. of Jeronimo de Miranda, consists of a conversation between a physician and an elderly professor of rhetoric and Greek. In the central part of the dialogue both characters agree that a competent doctor should be highly proficient in Latin, Greek and Arabic in order to read authoritative texts in the original. These included works by Celsus, Hippocrates, Galen, Avicenna, Aristotle, Plato, Rhazes and Averroes. The two characters of the dialogue also agree that a proficient physician should be acquainted with natural philosophy, astrology astrology, form of divination based on the theory that the movements of the celestial bodies—the stars, the planets, the sun, and the moon—influence human affairs and determine the course of events. , arithmetic, music and, first and foremost, he should be taught by learned doctors. Furthermore, he should practise anatomy in order to visualize, on the body, the parts referred to in medical texts, and be experienced, patient, judicious ju·di·cious adj. Having or exhibiting sound judgment; prudent. [From French judicieux, from Latin i , polite, honest and so on. (1) None of the Portuguese medical writers of the sixteenth century appears to have entirely fulfilled such a wide range of requirements. Neither did they share the same interests or approaches. Yet the model portrayed in Miranda's dialogue provides an apt general picture of the ideals and characteristics of a group of physicians whose work and circumstances are the central concern of this article. Medical scholarship in early modern Portugal is considered here as part of a broader academic context including all European countries which received and produced printed books and manuscript compilations on the main subjects of the day (philosophy, theology, law, medicine and literature). It developed 'after the establishment of printing as a means of disseminating texts, and before the development of strong vernacular and national intellectual traditions'. (2) As is well known, in this context a cultural heritage from medieval Western Europe Western Europe The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO). , whose scope and authority had been increased and to an extent changed by the rediscovery Noun 1. rediscovery - the act of discovering again discovery, find, uncovering - the act of discovering something rediscovery n → redescubrimiento of Greek and Roman authors, coexisted with an increasing, although by no means pre-eminent pre·em·i·nent or pre-em·i·nent adj. Superior to or notable above all others; outstanding. See Synonyms at dominant, noted. [Middle English, from Latin prae , range of new information, brought about by the growth of observational, experimental and mathematical approaches in various academic fields. Broad changes in this picture, linked with the prevalence of the latter development, are considered to have occurred during the seventeenth century. Through the study of medical writers and the ways in which they related to their cultural environment, I shall attempt to offer a nuanced account of the influences on Portuguese scholarship in the sixteenth century. The physicians analysed here had in common formal qualifications and social and professional status. Without exception they were university-educated and combined at least two of the most prestigious medical occupations of the day, those of university teacher, author and physician to a powerful clientele. For this reason in this article emphasis is placed on medicine as taught in the universities. It was generally accepted that universities, although preserving a basically medieval curriculum, provided the breeding ground for most innovations in medical science and education in sixteenth-century Europe. An enquiry into academic medicine illuminates the doctrines which constituted the intellectual infrastructure of practices and beliefs broadly disseminated among medical practitioners. I shall attempt in some measure to compare the way concepts occur in different areas of medicine, for example among practitioners outside the academic world, and university-educated physicians. Aside from this, I shall make no attempt to cover issues relevant to the general subject of medicine in the sixteenth century, such as the social diversity of medical practitioners, surgery, and herbal medicine herbal medicine, use of natural plant substances (botanicals) to treat and prevent illness. The practice has existed since prehistoric times and flourishes today as the primary form of medicine for perhaps as much as 80% of the world's population. and pharmacology pharmacology, study of the changes produced in living animals by chemical substances, especially the actions of drugs, substances used to treat disease. Systematic investigation of the effects of drugs based on animal experimentation and the use of isolated and . I shall say very little about clinical instruction in hospitals and nothing at all on, for example, the plague and new diseases of the time such as syphilis syphilis (sĭf`əlĭs), contagious sexually transmitted disease caused by the spirochete Treponema pallidum (described by Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann in 1905). . To cover such a wide range of topics would go far beyond the scope of this article. What follows is an attempt to provide answers to various questions: what are the most prominent influences to be found in the academic medical world of sixteenth-century Portugal? In which ways have medical writers drawn upon these influences and how are they combined in their works? In which social and institutional context did this occur? How did developments in this context affect medicine and medical education? In order to answer these questions I should like to consider first aspects of the social and institutional links of the authors studied. The preliminary pages of Miranda's Dialogo da perfeycam..., which is dedicated to King Sebastiao, who reigned 1568-78, contain two poems praising the king, the maritime feats of the Portuguese nation and its overseas wars and dominion. The dialogue also contains poems addressed to Joao III's widow, Queen Catarina (?-1578), and Cardinal Henrique (1512-80), who were both regents during Sebastiao's minority (1557-67). In the dedication of the dialogue to the young monarch, Miranda refers to its contents as 'as letras, experiencia, & honestidade, & outras virtudes que ha de ter o bom medico, pera ter cuydado de auisar aos Reys & Principes na saude, & os curar nas doencas, & como ha de ter diligencia grandissima e continua con·tin·u·a n. A plural of continuum. com os pacientes'. (3) Many and various sources related to Portugal in the sixteenth century testify to the existence of close links between academic medicine and the centres of political power. The dedication of books is one such source since patronage usually went with such dedications. Of the medical texts studied, Antonio Luiz's Problematum libri quinq (1539), (4) and Enrique de Cuellar's Ad libros tres predictionum Hippocr. (1543), (5) are dedicated to King Joao III, with both authors making reference to the monarch's military virtues and colonial power. Afonso Rodrigues de Guevara's In pluribus ex ijs quibus Galenus impugnatur ab Andrea Vesalio... (1559) is dedicated to Queen Catarina, but is principally concerned with praising Joao III (who had already died by the time Guevara's work was published) for his role in promoting the development of the university. (6) Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga's Opera omnia in Galeni libros (first published in 1587) was dedicated to King Sebastiao before the king's death. (7) Other medical works were dedicated to members of the political elite, including Pierre Brissot's Apologetica disceptatio, qua docetur per quae loca sanguis mitti debeat in visceru inflammationibus... (published posthumously post·hu·mous adj. 1. Occurring or continuing after one's death: a posthumous award. 2. Published after the writer's death: a posthumous book. 3. in 1525), dedicated to Joao III's brother, Cardinal Afonso; (8) Antonio Luiz's De Re Medica medica (māˑ·dē·k Opera (1540), dedicated to the scholar and senior administrator Joao de Barros (1496-1570); (9) and Garcia Lopes' Commentarii De Varia var·i·a n. A miscellany, especially of literary works. [Latin, from neuter pl. of varius, various.] Rei Medicae Lectione (1564), dedicated to the governor and military commander Joao Mascarenhas. (10) This phenomenon was not peculiar to Portugal, but to be a member of the royal entourage The e-mail program included in the Macintosh version of Microsoft Office. Combining the functions of Outlook with scheduling capabilities, Entourage was introduced with Microsoft Office 2001 for Mac, the first release of Office for OS X. seems to have been especially important in Portugal as most activities were connected with the court and depended upon its support. The king could grant to his proteges a professorship at the university, since he made the appointments himself. Joao III personally chose teachers such as Enrique de Cuellar (c. 1483-c. 1544), who taught Galen in the Cadeira de prima (1537-44); Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga (1513-79), who taught the Hippocratic Corpus The Hippocratic Corpus (Latin: Corpus Hippocraticum), Hippocratic Collection, or Hippocratic Canon, is a collection of around seventy early medical works from ancient Greece strongly associated with the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates and his teachings. and Rhazes in the Cadeira de vespera (1538-57), and Galen in the Cadeira de prima (1557-79); and Antonio Luiz (d. 1565), who taught Aristotle (1547-48) and Galen (1547-50) in one of the so-called minor cadeiras of medicine at the University of Coimbra. (11) To be a physician to the royal family was another prestigious position at court. The French physician Pierre Brissot's controversial ideas on which part of the body a venesection venesection /vene·sec·tion/ (ven?e-sek´shun) phlebotomy. ven·e·sec·tion n. See phlebotomy. Venesection Another name for phlebotomy. should be performed (discussed in more detail below) acquired notoriety NOTORIETY, evidence. That which is generally known. 2. This notoriety is of fact or of law. In general, the notoriety of a fact is not sufficient to found a judgment or to rely on its truth; 1 Ohio Rep. among Portuguese doctors when he treated King Manuel for 'pleurisy' (1518), against the opinion of the chief physician (physico-mor) of the kingdom. Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga, who descended from a family of physicians to the Iberian kings, gained prestige from the fact that he was physician to the royal family. (12) This was also the case with Garcia Lopes. A passage from his Commentarii de Varia Rei Medicae Lectione consists of a discussion on the Hippocratic-Galenic doctrine on the influence of environmental-climatic factors upon the human body, relating to relating to relate prep → concernant relating to relate prep → bezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc the ages of man. Garcia Lopes' main concern was to address the problem, in medical terms, of seven-year old King Sebastiao travelling from Lisbon to Santarem. (13) A brief account of the Spanish Afonso Rodrigues de Guevara's long stay in Portugal illustrates the different aspects of the relationship between academic medicine and the court, and the personal advantages that could result from such links. Guevara, licentiate licentiate /li·cen·ti·ate/ (li-sen´she-at) one holding a license from an authorized agency giving the right to practice a particular profession. in medicine at the University of Siguenza, Spain, had later studied anatomy in Bologna Bologna (bōlô`nyä), city (1991 pop. 404,378), capital of Emilia-Romagna and of Bologna prov., N central Italy, at the foot of the Apennines and on the Aemilian Way. . He was a wellknown teacher of anatomy at the University of Valladolid The University of Valladolid is a university in the city of Valladolid in the Valladolid province of the autonomous region of Castile-Leon,in northern Spain. It was chartered by Clement VI in 1346 but now claims continuity with the University of Palencia, founded in 1212. when he was invited by Joao III to teach at Coimbra, as part of the restructuring of the university supported by the monarch. He met the king and queen in 1550. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. his book, he dissected dis·sect·ed adj. 1. Botany Divided into many deep, narrow segments: dissected leaves. 2. Geology Cut by irregular valleys and hills. Adj. 1. the heart of an animal in the presence of the royal couple, in keeping with the current approach to anatomy as a spectacle. (14) Guevara began teaching at Coimbra in 1556, shortly before the death of Joao III. He was much favoured by Queen Catarina. In 1557 a chair of surgery was created for him at the university. Despite now being in charge of two disciplines, anatomy and surgery, it is recorded in acta of the university council that he was frequently absent, travelling to the court in Lisbon and to Spain. Of the anatomical dissections which he refers to in his book, including those of human bodies, Guevara mentions only once dissections performed at the University of Coimbra during the time he was teaching there, and these were on animals. (15) In 1561, Guevara moved to Lisbon, being appointed physician to the queen and to the Hospital de Todos os Santos Santos (sän`t s), city (1996 pop. 412,288), São Paulo state, SE Brazil, on the island of São Vicente in the Atlantic just off the mainland. , where he was given the
task of organizing the teaching of anatomy and surgery. Although a
directive stating his obligation to practise anatomy at the hospital is
known, there are no sources indicating whether or how anatomical
dissections were performed. To sum up, there is every indication that,
despite being a competant anatomist a·nat·o·mistn. An expert in or a student of anatomy. anatomist one skilled in anatomy. , potentially capable of exerting an important influence on practical anatomy and observation, Guevara did not actually do very much either at the university or in the hospital. His participation at court and in military activities seems to have been more marked than his efforts as an educator. This is evident from the fact that he was among the soldiers and noblemen imprisoned im·pris·on tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. [Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en- at Alcacer-Kebir in 1578, where the prime of Portuguese nobility, King Sebastiao among them, was defeated and slain in an attempt to invade Morocco. (16) Afonso de Guevara provides an example of the sort of attraction that the court in Lisbon held for scholars who were supposed to live and work in Coimbra, and of the willingness of the central powers Central Powers, in World War I, the coalition of Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire. Central Powers World War I coalition that was defeated by the Allied Powers. to allow courtier-scholars to ignore university regulations. But this appears not to have been the only example of royal interference to protect university teachers who flouted regulations. In his investigation based on acta of the university council, Teixeira de Carvalho notes that, in order to justify flouting the rules, 'a autorizacao do conselho ou do reitor era facil de obter e, quando faltava, o lente partia para Lisboa e voltava de la armado com uma provisao regia que tudo resolvia a seu favor'. (17) Indeed, if it can be said that the university was favoured by a number of measures taken by Portuguese kings of the sixteenth century in regard to the improvement of material conditions, staff and curriculum, it was also in many ways limited by the kings' interference in its administration. Aside from unfortunate developments such as those outlined above, medical teaching at the University of Coimbra during the sixteenth century was also provided by those who were eminent for their competence both as educators and practitioners, although they mainly worked within the broad framework inherited from their predecessors. Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga is perhaps the most distinguished example. The great esteem in which Veiga was held is expressed in numerous passages from works published by his pupils. Among them is the work on medical deontology of Henrique Jorge Henriques, entitled Retrato del Perfecto per·fec·to n. pl. per·fec·tos A cigar of standard length, thick in the center and tapered at each end. [From Spanish, perfect, from Latin perfectus; see perfect.] Medico (1595), in which Veiga is referred to as an 'admirable, y perfecto Medico, que otro hasta el dia de oy no ha auido dende (sic) los Gentiles'. (18) Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga had an exemplary and successful medical career. He was born into a family of renowned physicians to the Iberian kings and he himself served a powerful clientele, including King Joao III and King Sebastiao, and the regent Cardinal Henrique. He studied medicine in Salamanca and began teaching at the University of Coimbra at the age of twenty-five. Despite being a descendant of a Jewish family, in his favour was the fact that his ancestors had long severed sev·er v. sev·ered, sev·er·ing, sev·ers v.tr. 1. To set or keep apart; divide or separate. 2. To cut off (a part) from a whole. 3. relations with the Hebrew faith and customs. Unlike other Jewish physicians, therefore, he was not excluded from teaching at the university and had no need to leave Portugal because of religious persecution Please see the relevant discussion on the . . His long career as a teacher and doctor was complemented by his writing. He wrote a number of commentaries on Galen and one on the Hippocratic text, De victus ratione. (19) Although Veiga cites doctors of the modern school such as Andreas Vesalius Noun 1. Andreas Vesalius - a Flemish surgeon who is considered the father of modern anatomy (1514-1564) Vesalius (1514-64), Joannes Argenterius (1513-72) and Jean Fernel For the crater, see Fernelius (crater). Jean François Fernel (in Latin, Fernelius) (Montdidier 1497–Fontainebleau 1558) was a French physician who introduced the term "physiology" to describe the study of the body's function. (1497-1558) in his commentaries on Galen's work, bearing witness to his familiarity with new approaches to medicine, he had great respect for ancient authors, especially Galen. In the preface to his Opera omnia in Galeni libros, he says that 'Ex libris, quos hactenus de re Medica scriptos nostra probauit aetas, nullus est, quem vniuersi, qui huic disciplinae nomina dederunt, aut crebrius, aut maiore cum vilitate manibus versent quam Galen monumenta'. (20) Veiga was clearly referring to the Greek texts of Galen or Latin translations of them according to canons of the studia humanitatis, from which some widely criticized errors in Arabic and medieval Latin Medieval Latin n. The Latin language as used from about 700 to about 1500. Medieval Latin Noun the Latin language as used throughout Europe in the Middle Ages Noun 1. versions had been eliminated. Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga's concern with the study and interpretation of Galen and Hippocrates reflects the extent to which the humanist interest in firsthand first·hand adj. Received from the original source: firsthand information. first knowledge of the original Greek texts found its way into the intellectual medical domain in sixteenth-century Portugal. Humanism humanism, philosophical and literary movement in which man and his capabilities are the central concern. The term was originally restricted to a point of view prevalent among thinkers in the Renaissance. was introduced into Portugal through most of the channels discussed in Paul Oskar Kristeller's 'The European Diffusion of Italian Humanism'. (21) It was introduced by foreign scholars such as the Italian Cataldus Siculus, who arrived there in 1485 to be tutor to Joao II's son Jorge; (22) the Flemish Nicholas Cleynaerts (c. 1493-1542), who worked for the royal family for several years and was tutor to Joao III's brother Henrique, who was later to be regent and king; (23) and the humanists This is a partial list of famous humanists, including both secular and religious humanists.
His father, a younger son of an old family, owned the farm of Moss, in the parish of Killearn, Stirling, but he (1506-82). (24) Portuguese students, political and religious envoys sent to Italy, Spain, France and the Low Countries, many of them sponsored by the crown, also played an important part in this process. This was the case with Henrique Caiado (Hermicus Caiadus) who was a pupil of Poliziano and Philippus Beroaldus the Elder (1453-1505) in Italy, (25) and the historian Damiao de Gois (1501-72) who was Portuguese ambassador to Flanders and Germany. (26) An important channel of humanist influence was the dedication of books and the patronage implied by this. Thinkers such as Erasmus (1466?-1536) and the Spanish Joannes Ludovicus Vives (1492-1540) dedicated books to Joao III. (27) Humanist literature, published and in manuscript, together with translations and commentaries on classical scholarship produced by the humanists, were brought to Portugal by all the means referred to here. (28) The result of this was the creation by Joao III of the College of Arts, which was modelled on the humanist educational programme, and the growth of the disciplines of grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history and moral philosophy, which became the new fashionable interests for Portuguese scholars. Most of the academic texts of the time, as well as activities at court, testify to this development. But more relevant to this investigation than the studia humanitatis were the attitudes deriving from their influence, of unconditional respect for ancient culture and its modern Italian revival, and hence of a more dogmatic dog·mat·ic adj. 1. Relating to, characteristic of, or resulting from dogma. 2. Characterized by an authoritative, arrogant assertion of unproved or unprovable principles. See Synonyms at dictatorial. and philological phi·lol·o·gy n. 1. Literary study or classical scholarship. 2. See historical linguistics. [Middle English philologie, from Latin philologia, love of learning approach to ancient texts. Also of particular importance was the large body of ancient Greek Noun 1. Ancient Greek - the Greek language prior to the Roman Empire Greek, Hellenic, Hellenic language - the Hellenic branch of the Indo-European family of languages and Latin texts on science and philosophy, circulated by the humanists. Emphasis on classical scholarship was not the most prominent feature of intellectual activity related to maritime and colonial enterprises. An unprecedented development in naval engineering Noun 1. naval engineering - the branch of engineering that deals with the design and construction and operation of ships applied science, engineering science, technology, engineering - the discipline dealing with the art or science of applying scientific knowledge , naval instruments, nautical nau·ti·cal adj. Of, relating to, or characteristic of ships, shipping, sailors, or navigation on a body of water. [From Latin nauticus, from Greek nautikos, from astronomy and cartography cartography: see map. cartography or mapmaking Art and science of representing a geographic area graphically, usually by means of a map or chart. Political, cultural, or other nongeographic features may be superimposed. resulted from the sponsorship of princes such as Henrique 'the Navigator' (1394-1460) and Joao II. Techniques previously developed by the Italians in the Mediterranean were adapted by the Portuguese (and Spanish) to the quite different conditions of navigation across the Atlantic ocean Across the Atlantic Ocean is the twenty-eighth episode[1] of Mobile Suit Gundam. Plot summary Amuro and Sayla manage to reduce their time in docking the Gundam and the G-Fighter to fifteen seconds. , leading to the growth of a modern trend in methodical me·thod·i·cal also me·thod·ic adj. 1. Arranged or proceeding in regular, systematic order. 2. Characterized by ordered and systematic habits or behavior. See Synonyms at orderly. reasoning based on observations in Portugal. (29) Major figures involved in this trend were the Catalan cosmographer cos·mog·ra·phy n. pl. cos·mog·ra·phies 1. The study of the visible universe that includes geography and astronomy. 2. , cartographer and maker of nautical instruments Jacome de Maiorca (first half of the fifteenth century), the Jewish astronomer Abraao Zacuto (c. 1452-c. 1525) and the mathematician Pedro Nunes Pedro Nunes (pron. IPA: ['pedɾu 'nunɨʃ]; Latin, Petrus Nonius), (1502, Alcácer do Sal – August 11, 1578, Coimbra) was a Portuguese mathematician, cosmographer, and professor, born from a New (1502-78). Empiricism empiricism (ĕmpĭr`ĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=experience], philosophical doctrine that all knowledge is derived from experience. For most empiricists, experience includes inner experience—reflection upon the mind and its was to lead to other developments in Portuguese scholarship. Advances in navigation systems A GPS-based electronic system in a car or truck that provides a real time map of the vehicle's current location as well as step-by-step directions to a programmed destination. See GPS and vehicle tracking. meant that previously unseen, and sometimes wrongly identified, phenomena and lands could now be compared with ancient texts and current European scholarship. Aside from astronomy and geography, this tendency is apparent in studies of eastern medicinal plants medicinal plants, plants used as natural medicines. This practice has existed since prehistoric times. There are three ways in which plants have been found useful in medicine. and drugs. Here the empirical trend had its full expression in Garcia de Orta's Coloquios dos simples e drogas e cousas medicinais da India (1563), a study of the herbs and drugs of India, in which the results of direct observation are critically compared with the works of such authorities as Galen, Dioscorides and Pliny. (30) In medicine, aside from botanical and pharmacological Pharmacological Referring to therapy that relies on drugs. Mentioned in: Pain Management pharmacological, pharmacologic pertaining to pharmacology. studies, the growth of empiricism was only marginal. This is particularly true of anatomy. It is possible to say that, because of the reception of ideas from other European countries, especially Italy, Spain and France, medical writers in Portugal displayed a certain degree of awareness of empirical observation in medicine. Nonetheless, they were mainly related to the tradition of textual commentary which dominated the European intellectual life of the time. The adoption of ideas derived from Renaissance Neoplatonism seems an almost natural consequence in a context where Florentine models were fashionable. Yet more fundamental factors are involved in this phenomenon. First there is the question, which obviously applies to Europe as a whole, of the adequacy of Platonism to bridge the 'profound intellectual gap between dogmatic theology Same as Dogmatics. See also: dogmatic which had its basis in faith, and Aristotelian scholasticism scholasticism (skōlăs`tĭsĭzəm), philosophy and theology of Western Christendom in the Middle Ages. Virtually all medieval philosophers of any significance were theologians, and their philosophy is generally embodied in their which was then largely limited to logic and physics', as proposed by Kristeller, (31) or 'to placing man in the ideal centre of the world', according to Nicola Abbagnano Nicola Abbagnano (15 July 1901 – september 9 1990) was an Italian existential philosopher. Nicola Abbagnano was born in Salerno[1]. He studied in Naples and taught at Turin. . (32) Secondly, specific features of Portuguese culture contributed to the influence of Neoplatonism there. Renaissance Neoplatonism has been defined as the 'receptive body' and the 'organic whole' which sustained ideas stemming from hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air. her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal adj. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. , orphic, neopythagorean, astrological as·trol·o·gy n. 1. The study of the positions and aspects of celestial bodies in the belief that they have an influence on the course of natural earthly occurrences and human affairs. 2. Obsolete Astronomy. , cabalistic cab·a·lis·tic adj. 1. Having a secret or hidden meaning; occult: cabalistic symbols engraved in stone. 2. Variant of kabbalistic. and other influences of the period, (33) some of which were established trends in the Iberian peninsula Iberian Peninsula, c.230,400 sq mi (596,740 sq km), SW Europe, separated from the rest of Europe by the Pyrenees. Comprising Spain and Portugal, it is washed on the N and W by the Atlantic Ocean and on the S and E by the Mediterranean Sea; the Strait of Gibraltar long before the Quattrocento quat·tro·cen·to n. The 15th-century period of Italian art and literature. [Italian, short for (mil) quattrocento, one thousand four hundred : quattro, four (from Latin . This is the case with astrology and Jewish philosophical and religious ideas. It was, in fact, in the Iberian peninsula that cabalistic thought, adopted by one of the most distinguished Florentine Platonists, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (February 24, 1463 -November 17, 1494) was an Italian Renaissance philosopher.[1] He was celebrated for the events of 1486, when at the age of twenty-three, he proposed to defend 900 theses on religion, philosophy, natural philosophy and (1463-94), originated. Earlier historical conditions appear to have constituted a favourable ground for the adoption of influences emanating from Italian Neoplatonism. Moreover, in the context of Portugal, they implied the importance of particular attitudes and beliefs relating to the syncretic syn·cre·tism n. 1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous. 2. trend at issue here, such as astrology and the cabala cabala: see kabbalah. cabala Jewish oral traditions, originating with Moses. [Judaism: Benét, 154] See : Mysticism . (34) There is evidence from the treatises studied of the predominance pre·dom·i·nance also pre·dom·i·nan·cy n. The state or quality of being predominant; preponderance. Noun 1. predominance - the state of being predominant over others predomination, prepotency of more dogmatic and philological approaches to ancient texts. For example, in the first chapter of De Varia Rei Medicae Lectione Garcia Lopes claims that 'si quae video, quae a magni Hippo. aut Gal. sententia sen·ten·tia n. pl. sen·ten·ti·ae An adage or aphorism. [Latin; see sentence.] aliena sunt, ea confodeo, incito, et, si fieri potest, extirpo, ne alumnos verae medecinae, (quae non est alia, quam quae ab Hipp. et Gal. scribitur) ita suo foetore corrumpant'. (35) Hence a central preoccupation of his book, which treats a range of issues relating to therapeutics, is to recover the 'purity' of the doctrines of Galen and Hippocrates by pointing out additions and misinterpretations of Arabic authors. Such is also a main concern of Enrique de Cuellar. In Ad libros tres predictionum Hippocr., Cuellar's textual focus is expressed by his quotation of both Hippocrates' text on prognosis and Galen's comments on it, which are followed by his own commentaries. The general aim of 'going back to the Greeks' is also expressed in the writers' wish to state clearly that they have drawn their information from such sources. An example is Antonio Luiz's eagerness to emphasize that he based his Problematum libri quinq on Greek authors, quoting 'Auctores quos in hoc concinnando opere secutu sum: graeci fuere, atq; ij imprimis IMPRIMIS. In the first place; as, imprimis, I direct my just debts to be paid. See Item. Galenus, Proclus, Plutarchus, Plato, Aristoteles, Alcinous, Alexander, diuus Dionysius, et alij innumeri'. (36) Portuguese medical writers were acknowledged for producing improved editions of Galen's texts, including works unknown in the Middle Ages. Galen's De Placitis Hippocratis et Platonis and De Usu Partium are quoted in most texts studied. The former is known not to have been translated before the Renaissance, whilst the latter was available only in abridged form before the fourteenth century. (37) The introduction of Hippocratic studies to Portugal was mainly due to Pierre Brissot (1478-1522), who lived there 1518-22. It appears that his visit to Portugal was initially connected with plans to go to India, to develop studies in medical botany botany, science devoted to the study of plants. Botany, microbiology, and zoology together compose the science of biology. Humanity's earliest concern with plants was with their practical uses, i.e., for fuel, clothing, shelter, and, particularly, food and drugs. and drugs. Before this, in Paris, he had been involved in a medical controversy relating to venesection, where he supported genuine Hippocratic and Galenic Ga`len´ic a. 1. Pertaining to, or containing, galena. 1. Relating to Galen ersfn> or to his principles and method of treating diseases. concepts and procedures opposed to Arabic medicine. This controversy was concerned with the question of the elimination of unwanted humours by 'revulsion' or 'derivation', therapeutic procedures which were to be performed on different parts of the body according to the site of the complaint. Brissot expressed his ideas particularly with reference to 'pleurisy', a disease which he had the opportunity to treat in 1514. This could have been either what is now designated as 'pleurisy' or some related pulmonary disease. Brissot, adopting Hippocratic and Galenic concepts, condemned the Arabic practice of slow bleeding (sometimes extracting only one or two drops of blood) from the site most distant from the affected part. He contended that a considerable quantity of blood should be extracted and that in 'pleurisy' it did not matter whether venesection was practised on the right or the left side, since the affected region was drained by the vena cava vena cava Either of two major veins that deliver oxygen-depleted blood to the right side of the heart. The superior vena cava drains the upper body, and the inferior vena cava drains the lower body. See also cardiovascular system, circulation. . He also claimed that for revulsive revulsive 1. causing revulsion. 2. an agent causing revulsion; a counterirritant. phlebotomy Phlebotomy Definition Phlebotomy is the act of drawing or removing blood from the circulatory system through a cut (incision) or puncture in order to obtain a sample for analysis and diagnosis. , in a Hippocratic sense, enough distance could be achieved by bleeding the arm on the affected side. It was thus a mistake to choose, as was common practice, the saphenous vein saphenous vein n. Either of two main superficial veins of the leg, one larger than the other, that begin at the foot. Saphenous vein A long vein in the thigh or calf commonly used for bypass grafts. . In 1518, Brissot treated people affected by 'pleurisy' in Evora, including King Manuel. He put his own principles into practice, in opposition to the opinion of the chief physician of the kingdom, Dionysio. A controversy was also generated in Portuguese medical circles, echoes of which can be found in the sources for this study. (38) The two main rivals developed their opinions in print. Brissot's arguments, particularly in relation to bleeding in 'pleurisy', were developed in the Apologetica disceptatio... Dionysio's text has been lost. (39) If in many respects the opinion of past authorities has been accepted without criticism by Portuguese medical writers, it is important to note that this has not always been the case. I have already mentioned Afonso de Guevara, who was undoubtedly best able to work by observation of the authors studied, and who was willing to disagree on occasion with Galen, the author to whom he paid special tribute. The same holds true for Rodrigo de Castro (1546-1627). In his De universa mulierum Medicina (1603) Castro makes use of anatomical and clinical observation to elucidate e·lu·ci·date v. e·lu·ci·dat·ed, e·lu·ci·dat·ing, e·lu·ci·dates v.tr. To make clear or plain, especially by explanation; clarify. v.intr. To give an explanation that serves to clarify. questions where there was disagreement between medical authorities, or to point out any errors, although he also relied heavily upon them. (40) The acceptance of ideas of the neoterici, which differed from ancient authorities, is also found, although rarely, in medical texts in Portugal. For example, Garcia Lopes, based on Gabriele Falloppia's Observationes anatomicae (1561), rejects the Hippocratic aphorism aphorism (ăf`ərĭz'əm), short, pithy statement of an evident truth concerned with life or nature; distinguished from the axiom because its truth is not capable of scientific demonstration. that the cause of miscarriage miscarriage: see abortion. miscarriage or spontaneous abortion Spontaneous expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus before it can live outside the mother. at two or three months, for no apparent reason, was the result of the accumulation of mucus mucus /mu·cus/ (mu´kus) the free slime of the mucous membranes, composed of secretion of the glands, various salts, desquamated cells, and leukocytes. mu·cus n. in the blood vessels Blood vessels Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names. which connect the embryo to the uterus (cotyledons), thereby rendering them unable to hold the weight of the embryo, which would then detach de·tach v. 1. To separate or unfasten; disconnect. 2. To remove from association or union with something. . Lopes argued that such cases of miscarriage were caused by the interruption of the embryo's nourishment nour·ish·ment n. Something that nourishes; food. due to obstruction caused by the mucus, rather than the bursting of the blood vessels. (41) From the examples mentioned it may be inferred that uncritical acceptance of received authority coexisted with attempts to bring it into question. This is not a distinctive feature of Portuguese writers
As is well known, the initial interest in classical languages by Renaissance humanists also extended to vernaculars. This is evident in the use of Iberian vernaculars by Portuguese medical writers in some of the works studied. Miranda's Dialogo da perfeycam... and Henriques' Retrato del Perfecto Medico are written in Portuguese and Spanish respectively. Joao de Barros' Ropicapnefma, which is among the non-medical sources in this study, is written in Portuguese. Attempts to write medical texts in vernaculars, or to translate authoritative texts into them, appear to have generated an awareness of the difficulty of translating concepts and terms from Latin and Greek into languages unequipped Adj. 1. unequipped - without necessary physical or intellectual equipment; "guerrillas unequipped for a pitched battle"; "unequipped for jobs in a modern technological society" to express notions of human biology Human biology is an interdisciplinary academic field of biology, biological anthropology, and medicine which focuses on humans; it is closely related to primate biology, and a number of other fields. . This is indicated in a passage from the Dialogo da perfeycam... in which Miranda notes the deficiency of vernacular words corresponding to Latin and Greek terms. Miranda ascribes this deficiency to the influence of the languages of people considered by him to be 'barbarian', who inhabited the Iberian peninsula (meaning Goths Goths: see Ostrogoths; Visigoths. and Muslims). (43) The inclusion of literary pieces in medical works also derived from humanist influences. Epigrams and other forms of poetry addressed to patrons, authors and readers, or describing the work they accompany, are often found in academic medical texts. The dedications themselves are written in the rhetorical style characteristic of the humanists, quoting Greek mythology Greek mythology Oral and literary traditions of the ancient Greeks concerning their gods and heroes and the nature and history of the cosmos. The Greek myths and legends are known today primarily from Greek literature, including such classic works as Homer's Iliad and , Roman and Greek thinkers and statesmen, and the like. The existence of links between academic medicine and the literary world is also revealed by Andre Falcao de Resende in 'Microcosmographia, e Descripcao do Mundo Pequeno, que e o Homem', a long poem which consists of a general description of human anatomy Human anatomy is primarily the scientific study of the morphology of the adult human body.[1] It is subdivided into gross anatomy and microscopic anatomy.[1] presented as a metaphorical journey into a human body, and said to have been based on anatomical treatises. (44) The Portuguese were not alone in their tendency to 'humanize' different aspects of medicine. As is well known, the philological and literary concerns referred to above are characteristic of medical scholarship in all European countries participating in the interchange of books, scholars and ideas during the sixteenth century. Such concerns are in many ways linked to the Renaissance 'love of all things Greek'. The variety of ways in which Renaissance thinkers attempted to 'humanize' medicine include studies on botany and pharmacology in connection with the search for classical drugs, (45) an activity which, in Portugal, as noted above, was mainly developed outside the university and without the participation of anyone featured in this article. It should be pointed out that Portuguese thinkers working in this field sometimes revealed a rather critical attitude towards authors such as Galen and Dioscorides. Sixteenth-century attempts to 'humanize' medicine also included efforts to adapt late medieval Latin and Arabic textbooks to 'the literary tastes, philological scholarship, and scientific needs of the age'. (46) A suggestion of this tendency in Portuguese medicine is provided by Miranda's reference to a knowledge of Arabic being a necessary skill of a competent doctor, enabling him to read Arab authorities in the original. Humanist influences upon the medicine of the time included the zeal to establish better standards of surgical procedure, by making available to surgeons genuine Galenic and Hippocratic medicine. (47) The Portuguese surgeon Antonio da Cruz, who was educated according to such principles, committed himself to increasing access to theoretically informed surgery. This is his justification for writing Recopilacao de Curgia in the vernacular. (48) Humanist influences are only one aspect of 'the links between medicine and the rest of Renaissance intellectual life'. (49) Medicine figures among the most important disciplines in the university curriculum in Portugal, together with law (canon and civil) and theology. In this respect the Portuguese curriculum is similar to that of northern universities and differs from the Italian, in which theological faculties were absent. As in European universities in general, medicine in Portugal was closely related to the arts. From the regulations of 1559 it can be inferred that the Portuguese university is closer to the northern model, in which a full arts education was a pre-condition to the study of medicine, whereas in Italy arts and medicine were read together. But it seems that, in practice, both schemes were accepted by the University of Coimbra. (50) The arts curriculum in Coimbra was chiefly based on Aristotelian logic and natural philosophy, with less emphasis on moral philosophy and metaphysics metaphysics (mĕtəfĭz`ĭks), branch of philosophy concerned with the ultimate nature of existence. It perpetuates the Metaphysics of Aristotle, a collection of treatises placed after the Physics [Gr. , astronomy, mathematics, geometry, and perspective. It required the student's initial mastery of Latin and provided intensive training in disputation or formal debate. (51) These were roughly the subjects and practices which predominated elsewhere in Europe between the fourteenth and sixteenth century. (52) It appears that the principal aspect of the relationship between medicine and the arts was its influence upon the intellectual training of university-educated physicians. Hence, in the light of the curriculum outlined above, it is not surprising to find that medical writers of the sixteenth century were in many respects philosophically oriented. This is not only the result of an education in the arts. The 'philosophy-medicine connection', as has been argued by Schmitt, has long historical roots. It is found in varying forms in all medical authorities, from the Hippocratic writers and Galen through Aristotle to Avicenna and Averroes. (53) In the sixteenth century much philosophical awareness came from the continuing discussion on issues in the disputed borderland bor·der·land n. 1. a. Land located on or near a frontier. b. The fringe: a shadowy figure who lived on the borderland of the drug scene. 2. between Aristotelian and Galenic authority. The familiar question as to whether the heart or the brain was the ruling organ of the body, and in what sense, was one of those issues. It frequently featured in medical texts in sixteenth-century Portugal. (54) Philosophically-minded physicians of the Renaissance were not only influenced by Aristotelian, but also by Platonic philosophy. Galen, still the foremost medical authority of the time, has drawn upon Plato. As noted by Phillip De Lacy, Galen belongs 'among those Platonists who found large areas of agreement between Plato and Aristotle and even the Stoics'. (55) This bent towards the conciliation conciliation: see mediation. of Aristotle and Plato is found among Portuguese Renaissance doctors. As already noted in respect of the broad academic milieu mi·lieu n. pl. mi·lieus or mi·lieux 1. The totality of one's surroundings; an environment. 2. The social setting of a mental patient. milieu [Fr.] surroundings, environment. of early modern Portugal, Platonic influences also found their way into medicine through humanism. Such development is particularly evident in the first half of the sixteenth century and by no means influenced all Portuguese academic physicians. As one might expect, it is especially prominent in the works of Antonio Luiz, which were written before 1540 and combined medicine with other aspects familiar to one with any humanist education. Luiz's knowledge of Greek, Latin and Hebrew, as well as a panegyric panegyric Eulogistic oration or laudatory discourse. The panegyric originally was a speech delivered at an ancient Greek general assembly (panegyris), such as the Olympic and Panathenaic festivals. he addressed to Joao III, testify to his philological and literary interests. (56) His works also have a strong philosophical orientation. Medicine is examined along with topics such as moral and natural philosophy, logic, astronomy and so on. The role of the occult in medicine is found in his writings. (57) Luiz's wide range of intellectual interests is recorded in his Panagyrica oratio and also in the trial by the Portuguese Inquisition The Portuguese Inquisition was formally established in Portugal in 1536 at the request of the King of Portugal, João III. Manuel I had asked for the installation of the Inquisition in 1515, but was only after his death that the pope acquiesced. (1539), which investigated his Jewish ancestry and unorthodox beliefs. (58) In a passage from De Re Medica Opera Luiz says, after Galen, that medicine is a liberal art connected with practice, rather than a scientia ('quam medicinam nuncupamus, est una artium factiuarum, e non scietia'). (59) However, there is every indication that the medical practice he refers to in his books is drawn from the works he comments on, rather than a reference to case histories he has dealt with as a physician. Clearly Antonio Luiz's interests were focused on theory, not on the practice of medicine. Yet doctors who, unlike Luiz, combined the activities of medical author and university teacher with attending patients were also taught that disciplines such as logic, natural philosophy and astrology were necessary adjuncts to medicine. Such conviction can be traced back to the Italian universities Many of the world's oldest universities are located in Italy, in particular the University of Bologna (founded in 1088). Universities are supported by state funding so that students do not have to pay much for tuition. of the thirteenth century. It is expressed in the Conciliator con·cil·i·ate v. con·cil·i·at·ed, con·cil·i·at·ing, con·cil·i·ates v.tr. 1. To overcome the distrust or animosity of; appease. 2. of Pietro d'Abano Pietro d'Abano: see Abano, Pietro d'. (1257-c. 1315), which was widely circulated among European scholars up to the end of the sixteenth century and was known to Portuguese authors. (60) That disciplines such as natural philosophy and astrology were considered to be associated with medicine at the University of Coimbra is suggested by the mention of this idea in the works on medical deontology of two physicians who had studied there, Jeronimo de Miranda and Henrique Jorge Henriques. But if natural philosophy provided future doctors with a mainly theoretical grounding in general physical science, astrology seems to have been more closely connected with the practice of medicine. (61) The two characters of Henriques' Retrato del Perfecto Medico, a theologian the·o·lo·gi·an n. One who is learned in theology. theologian Noun a person versed in the study of theology Noun 1. and a physician, the latter representing the author himself, agree that the influences of heavenly bodies on man were to be taken into account in prognosis and the prescription of treatments such as venesection and purgation PURGATION. The clearing one's self of an offence charged, by denying the guilt on oath or affirmation. 2. There were two sorts of purgation, the vulgar, and the canonical. 3. . A range of authorities including Ptolemy, Aristotle, Hippocrates and Rhazes is cited in support of this view. The passage from the Retrato del Perfecto Medico on the relevance of astrology to medicine testifies to the prominent role of Arabic authors in the dissemination of this idea, an importance that was presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. linked with their role as general reference for practising physicians. (62) Evidence that practitioners outside the academic domain also accepted the medical relevance of astrology is provided by other sources, particularly the widely circulated almanac almanac, originally, a calendar with notations of astronomical and other data. Almanacs have been known in simple form almost since the invention of writing, for they served to record religious feasts, seasonal changes, and the like. Reportorio dos Tempos of Valentim Fernandes, published in at least nine editions between 1518 and 1573. (63) The Reportorio was said to be primarily directed at navigators, but it seems to have been intended for more general use as well. The Portuguese Reportorio is a version of Andre de Li's Spanish edition, translated and modified by Fernandes to Portuguese needs in respect of maritime voyages. It contains calendars, descriptions of techniques of navigation, astronomical data, some information relating to agriculture, astrology and a section on astrological medicine. (64) On the other hand, a passage from Miranda's Dialogo da perfeycam... suggests that not all doctors agreed on the usefulness of astrology. (65) This is consistent with the absence of any mention of the subject in many of the academic medical texts studied. When one considers the complexity of the influences briefly outlined above, on the whole it is apparent that, as Andrew Wear, Roger French and Iain Lonie put it, The sixteenth century medical writers felt that they were making a break with their Arabic and medieval past. They believed that they were creating a Reformation for medicine of which the central feature was the purification and assimilation of Greek knowledge. But the spirit of a Reformation is a more radical thing than its practice, and.[...] the most obvious signs of change lay in the rhetoric and in the ideological positions adopted by medical men. (66) The sources for this study provide proof of the continuation of medieval influences upon medicine in Portugal, along with Renaissance innovations. Aristotle's medical theories continued to be upheld. Although doctors identified themselves primarily with a Hippocratic-Galenic medical tradition, there is proof in the treatises studied that Aristotle was still a powerful influence. (67) The same holds true for Arabic medical writers, especially Avicenna, their most distinguished representative in the sixteenth century. Sections of Avicenna's Canon and Rhazes' ad Almansorem continued to be a part of the curriculum of Portuguese universities, as they did in university curricula elsewhere in Europe. Garcia Lopes says of Avicenna that he was 'cultivated and revered'. The context in which this is said--a discussion on whether a clyster clys·ter n. An enema. clyster an enema. should always precede venesection, or only in certain cases--suggests once again that Arabic authorities were most relevant to practical medicine. (68) Changes in academic medicine in sixteenth-century Portugal are slight and in general not easy to ascertain. Nonetheless, hints that they occurred are provided by a comparison of texts written in the first half of the sixteenth century with those produced after the middle of the century. I should like to consider first Joao de Barros' Ropicapnefma which, despite being a literary text, is an interesting source of enquiry into medicine in Portugal during the first decades of the sixteenth century. (69) The Ropicapnefma is an allegorical al·le·gor·i·cal also al·le·gor·ic adj. Of, characteristic of, or containing allegory: an allegorical painting of Victory leading an army. dialogue on moral philosophy, representing human existence in the form of trade deals. Its characters 'Will' and 'Understanding', having abandoned 'Reason' (that is, human reason enlightened by Christian revelation) for an association with 'Time', had become merchants of vice. At the end of life they meet 'Reason', who tries to lead them back to Christian faith and salvation. In this text Barros refers a number of times to the figure of the physician and the practice of medicine of the time. Medical concepts referred to in the Ropicapnefma are simplified anatomical and physiological notions derived from Galen, such as the division of mental activity into distinct processes (common sense, imagination, fantasy, cognition cognition Act or process of knowing. Cognition includes every mental process that may be described as an experience of knowing (including perceiving, recognizing, conceiving, and reasoning), as distinguished from an experience of feeling or of willing. and memory) allocated to specific sites within the brain. (70) The division of the powers of the mind into five distinct types seems to have been based on Avicenna's commentary on Aristotle's De anima anima /an·i·ma/ (an´i-mah) [L.] 1. the soul. 2. in jungian terminology, the unconscious, or inner being, of the individual, as opposed to the personality presented to the world (persona); by extension, used to . (71) A division of mental activity bearing on the same pattern, although using a threefold scheme (imaginative, estimative and mnemonic Pronounced "ni-mon-ic." A memory aid. In programming, it is a name assigned to a machine function. For example, COM1 is the mnemonic assigned to serial port #1 on a PC. Programming languages are almost entirely mnemonics. powers) is found in Resende's poem 'Microcosmographia' which, as already noted, was based on anatomical treatises written in the first half of the sixteenth century. (72) The medieval concept of the existence of different mental powers, allocated to distinct sites in the brain, does not occur in the remaining texts studied, most of them having been published, and presumably written, in the second half of the sixteenth century. Antonio Luiz's medical treatises were written a decade after Barros' Ropicapnefma and, unlike texts written later in the century, here the mention of empirical observation is entirely absent. Luiz's works can also be taken as examples of an early sixteenth-century approach to medicine in Portugal with respect to the humanist aim of excluding spurious spu·ri·ous adj. Similar in appearance or symptoms but unrelated in morphology or pathology; false. spurious simulated; not genuine; false. works from the canon of ancient authorities. Luiz seems to have accepted as Galen's the tract entitled An Animal Sit Id, Quod quod Noun Brit slang a jail [origin unknown] in Utero in utero (in u´ter-o) [L.] within the uterus. in u·ter·o adj. In the uterus. in utero adv. Est, which was falsely attributed to Galen. (73) This work is clearly referred to as not having been written by Galen in Rodrigo de Castro's De universa mulierum Medicina, which was published at the beginning of the seventeenth century. (74) Finally, the question of change in medical knowledge in Portugal is illuminated by an analysis of the way doctors used and placed their confidence in analogical an·a·log·i·cal adj. Of, expressing, composed of, or based on an analogy: the analogical use of a metaphor. an thought. GeoCrey Lloyd points out the existence of a connection between the development of scientific method in Greek thought and a somewhat more cautious use of analogical argument. He suggests that the clarification of certain logical relationships (particularly those of similarity and identity, and the different modes of opposition) occurred simultaneously with the growth of the 'demand for demonstrability' in Greek thought from the earliest times to Aristotle. (75) This illuminates the question of the growth of more empirical-observational approaches in Renaissance scholarship. A similar connection is postulated pos·tu·late tr.v. pos·tu·lat·ed, pos·tu·lat·ing, pos·tu·lates 1. To make claim for; demand. 2. To assume or assert the truth, reality, or necessity of, especially as a basis of an argument. 3. by Michel Foucault Michel Foucault (IPA pronunciation: [miˈʃɛl fuˈko]) (October 15, 1926 – June 25, 1984) was a French philosopher, historian and sociologist. regarding developments in early modern Western thought. Foucault notes the emergence, during the seventeenth century, of a critical attitude towards language, which was thenceforth thence·forth adv. From that time forward; thereafter. thenceforth or thenceforward Adverb Formal from that time on Adv. 1. considered to represent things and phenomena instead of being a natural sign of them. A fundamental aspect of the development of scientific thought is the recognition that the linguistic sign is arbitrary, not essentially involved with the thing signified but bound to the conventions of a language. This is said to have replaced the tradition of commentary and the pre-eminence of resemblance, the main mode of addressing the world in the sixteenth-century, which is based on the idea of the existence of a substantial unity between words and things. (76) Hence differences between the Portuguese medical authors are illustrated by the different uses of analogy in their works, as well as the extent to which this occurs. (77) The most obvious example is the difference between the substantial number of representations of the human body based on analogy from the works of Antonio Luiz and a more cautious use of analogical reasoning in the works of some of the remaining authors, and most notably in Afonso de Guevara. Such difference is considered here to express the development of a certain concern with empirical observation in medicine, as the sixteenth century proceeds and prior to the decline of the academic establishment as a whole, at the end of the century. Generally in Renaissance universities the medical curriculum did not express adequately the intellectual context of academic medicine, when considered in isolation from other aspects of this field. Although throughout Europe curricula were rather similar, the academic and professional atmosphere of the different medical faculties could vary widely. In certain cases, as Nancy AS Nancy-Lorraine is a French football club, based in Nancy. The team was founded in 1967 as a successor of the defunct FC Nancy, which collapsed in 1965. It was promoted to Ligue 1 for the 2005-06 season. Michel Platini played for the club between 1973 and 1979. Siraisi says, 'institutions in which an essentially medieval curriculum continued to be taught were simultaneously [...] centres of Renaissance innovation in anatomy, physiology, and medical education'. (78) In Portugal, unlike medical faculties elsewhere in Europe, the opportunities for changing the curricula came about during the process of remodelling and transfering the university from Lisbon to Coimbra, starting in 1537. Thus it is considered that the preservation of a basically medieval medical curriculum in Coimbra reflects, to an extent, the links between the teaching of medicine in Portugal and a framework inherited from the late medieval period, just as the introduction of innovations reflects Renaissance changes. The medical curriculum in sixteenth-century Portugal is described in the university regulations of 1504 (which were essentially maintained when the university was transferred to Coimbra) and of 1559, as well as in royal decrees and acta of the university council. Other regulations promulgated prom·ul·gate tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce. 2. by Joao III were put in place at Coimbra, 1544-45, but these are now lost. A brief examination of textbooks and the relative importance and order of the creation of chairs at Coimbra illuminates the question of continuity and change in medical teaching in sixteenth-century Portugal. The first to be established, and the highest in the hierarchy, was the Cadeira de prima (1537), in which Galen's works were taught (Tegne; De locis affectis; De morbo et symptomate; De differentiis febrium; De simplicibus). The second chair in rank, and second to be established, the Cadeira de vespera (1538), was dedicated to the teaching of Hippocratic texts (Aphorisms, On regimen, Epidemics, and Prognosis) and Rhazes' ninth book of the Almansor. The Cadeira de terca (1540) was based on Avicenna's Canon. Other texts by Galen on therapeutics were read in two other courses, called 'minor chairs' (1546). One of them also included the teaching of Aristotle. (79) In 1556, a chair of anatomy was created (anatomical studies at Coimbra are discussed in more depth below). Surgery was read together with anatomy from 1557 onwards. This curriculum was, for the most part, retained in the university regulations of 1559. (80) Needless to say, the emphasis on Galenic texts and Arabized interpretations of Galenic thought, which was the main feature of many courses at Coimbra, essentially conformed to late medieval and early Renaissance medical curricula throughout Europe. It reflects the growth of the branch of medicine concerned with the particulars of disease and treatment in European centres of learning, and in particular at Portuguese universities, especially in the fifteenth century. (81) As already suggested, the development of anatomical studies in Portugal proved to be unsuccessful for a number of reasons. Aside from the factors already mentioned, in all probability the secondary role given to empirical observation in the medical faculty in general contributed to this. Yet the creation of a chair in anatomy between 1550 and 1556 suggests an attempt to introduce Renaissance innovations in medical teaching to Portugal. The appointment of an experienced teacher of anatomy trained in Bologna confirms the attempt to bring medical teaching up to date in relation to fashionable models of the time. It is also expressed by the adoption of a Renaissance Latin Renaissance Latin is a name given to the distinctive form of Latin style developed during the European Renaissance of the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries, particularly by the humanist movement. translation of Galen's De Usu Partium as a textbook. Such measures were accompanied by others, referred to in the university regulations of 1559. These stipulate stip·u·late 1 v. stip·u·lat·ed, stip·u·lat·ing, stip·u·lates v.tr. 1. a. To lay down as a condition of an agreement; require by contract. b. that two anatomies on the bodies of patients who had died in the hospital should take place every year. The dissections should be attended by 'todos os lentes e estudantes de Medicina e Cirurgia e barbeiros e todos os mais, que commodamente poderem estar na dita casa'. Apart from anatomies of human bodies, six dissections of 'membros de animais brutos que lhe parecer que conformao mais com a compreicam humana' should be performed every year. (82) However much these measures may represent the influence of new developments of the time, and Afonso de Guevara may have been committed at one time to anatomical observation, there is every indication that at the University of Coimbra the practice of anatomy was conceived as a 'teaching device' rather than a 'research device'. One of the essential differences said to exist between the anatomy practised in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance was the purpose of dissection dissection /dis·sec·tion/ (di-sek´shun) 1. the act of dissecting. 2. a part or whole of an organism prepared by dissecting. . (83) Those who studied at Coimbra testify to the orientation of anatomical studies there: Miranda and Henriques refer to anatomy as necessary to medical training, to be able to demonstrate on the body what has been learned from a book. (84) Guevara relied heavily on the authority of Galen. Proof of his support of Galen's ideas is his book, which is a defence of Galen from Vesalius' criticism of his theory of human anatomy. That Galen's views were undisputed in Coimbra is also suggested by a passage from the Retrato del Perfecto Medico, in which Henriques claims that 'Sospechar, o presumir que Galeno no hizo anatomia en los cuerpos humanos, es ignoracia, y osarlo affirmar, es muy gra locura'. (85) If anatomical dissections took place in the Hospital de Todos os Santos in Lisbon they seem to have been performed for teaching purposes. This is suggested by the work of Antonio da Cruz, who studied surgery in Lisbon. Cruz, whose work as a surgeon necessarily implied encounters with the human body, relies heavily upon the chapter on anatomy in Guy de Chauliac's Chirurgia Magna Chirurgia magna (complete title: Inventarium sive chirurgia magna), completed in 1363, is a guide of surgery and practical medicine. Its title indicates that it is a reference for surgery (chirurgia). (1363) in the Recopilacao de Curgia. At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Cruz subscribed to the idea that the psychic spirit was produced from arterial blood arterial blood n. Blood that is oxygenated in the lungs, is found in the left chambers of the heart and in the arteries, and is relatively bright red. in the rete mirabile rete mi·ra·bi·le n. A vascular network interrupting the continuity of an artery or vein, as in the glomeruli of the kidney or in the liver. , a network of blood vessels believed to exist at the base of the human brain, a notion which was viewed with scepticism scep·ti·cism n. Variant of skepticism. skepticism, scepticism a personal disposition toward doubt or incredulity of facts, persons, or institutions. See also 312. PHILOSOPHY. — skeptic, n. by critics of Galen in the Renaissance. (86) On the other hand, along with ideas drawn from Greek and Arabo-Latin sources, Cruz refers to his own observations on anatomical dissections. (87) He also quotes from the Historia de la composicion del cuerpo humano (1556) of the Spanish anatomist Juan Valverde di Hamusco (c. 1520-c. 1588). This brief account of anatomy at the University of Coimbra serves to illustrate that, as seems to be the case with other Renaissance medical curricula, the curriculum for medicine there did not express adequately developments in academic medicine, when considered in isolation. If anatomical dissections of the human body were practised in Coimbra they were in all likelihood rare, despite what was prescribed in the university regulations. This is not specific to Portugal. Concerning anatomical knowledge in England before 1640 Webster notes that, in the colleges at Oxford and Cambridge, 'dissection appears not to have been practised more than sporadically although the Edwardian statutes prescribed two anatomies for each incepting MD'. (88) In England, as in Portugal, the absence of anatomical studies resulted in the pre-eminence of Galen in general medical teaching. Clinical instruction at Coimbra provides an example of a certain conflict between university regulations and the actual conduct and intellectual ambience of academic medicine. The main sources relating to clinical theory in Portugal are the university statutes of 1559 and 1591. Rocha Brito also refers to the teaching of medicine in the Hospital Real de Coimbra in acta of the university council of 1562, 1563 and 1567. (89) Although regular visits of teachers and students to the hospital are prescribed in the statutes, and the hospital is said to have been remodelled for this purpose with the transfer of the university to Coimbra, (90) none of the texts studied refers to the observation of patients in hospital. The few references to clinical observation which occur in these texts concern patients attended privately by the medical authors. It may be helpful at this point briefly to examine the kinds of medicine practised in Portugal during the sixteenth century. It is evident that academically-trained physicians belonged to a very restricted group, when compared to the variety of practitioners who were in charge of the medical care of most people at that time. However, it is difficult to give an account of medical practises other than those performed by university-educated doctors. This is connected with the general difficulty of dealing with artisans in an historical work, since their method of transmitting knowledge was partly, if not exclusively, oral. A few sources provide information about surgeons, barbers, apothecaries and other people engaged in the practice of medicine who were not university-trained. In a description of Lisbon written c. 1552, Cristovao Rodriguez de Oliveira refers to the existence of fifty-seven physicians (most of whom, in all probability, had not acquired their training at university); (91) sixty surgeons; forty-six apothecaries; 197 barbers (including barber-surgeons and others); twenty-five midwives; and twenty women who administered the clyster ('cristaleiras'). (92) Henrique Jorge Henriques, in the Retrato del Perfecto Medico, notes that two thousand healers, whose medical knowledge was acquired without formal education, the so-called 'empirics', had been established throughout Portugal. (93) The regulations of the Hospital de Todos os Santos in Lisbon (examined below) and other documents such as the licences issued by the Chief Physician of the Realm, mention a variety of healers including nurses, people who administered the clyster, people who treated cataracts Cataracts Definition A cataract is a cloudiness or opacity in the normally transparent crystalline lens of the eye. This cloudiness can cause a decrease in vision and may lead to eventual blindness. , hernia hernia, protrusion of an internal organ or part of an organ through the wall of a body cavity. The hernia is enclosed by a sac formed by the lining of the cavity. It results from a weakness or rupture in the wall, usually where there is already a natural weakness. healers, specialists in different kinds of wounds, healers using herbs and the sign of the Cross, and so on. (94) This account suggests that, along with a university education in medicine, there existed another kind of formal qualification for the practice of medicine, namely the possession of a licence from royal officials. The earliest recorded initiative by the public authorities to evaluate, attest To solemnly declare verbally or in writing that a particular document or testimony about an event is a true and accurate representation of the facts; to bear witness to. To formally certify by a signature that the signer has been present at the execution of a particular writing so as to the competence, and legitimate the activities of medical and surgical practitioners in Portugal dates from 1392 (by Joao I). From this date a number of royal decrees were issued, ordering those who desired to practise medicine and surgery to be examined by the chief physician and the chief surgeon respectively, and thus obtain a licence ('carta de habilitacao'). Until 1559, this also applied to physicians who had graduated from university. It gave rise to conflicts between the medical faculty and the chief physician. (95) So far as I am aware there is no information in the Portuguese historiography historiography Writing of history, especially that based on the critical examination of sources and the synthesis of chosen particulars from those sources into a narrative that will stand the test of critical methods. of medicine on organizations of practitioners such as medical colleges and guilds during the sixteenth century. As to the relationship between different kinds of practitioners, some information is provided by documents from the Hospital de Todos os Santos. This hospital was created by Joao II, who sought to organize it along the lines of the hospitals of Florence and Siena. It had four wards: one surgical; one clinical; a third ward for female patients having any treatment, except for venereal disease venereal disease (vənēr`ēəl): see sexually transmitted disease. ; and a fourth ward for cases of venereal disease. (96) The hospital regulations were established around 1504 and specify that two surgeons, two surgical apprentices, one barber-surgeon, one apothecary apothecary /apoth·e·cary/ (ah-poth´e-kar?e) pharmacist. a·poth·e·car·y n. pl. a·poth·e·car·ies Abbr. ap. 1. and nurses should comprise the staff, together with a physician and administrators. A hierarchical organization Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details. of medical practice in the Hospital de Todos os Santos is suggested by its regulations and other administrative documents. Generally, university graduates in medicine occupied the highest places, followed by skilled surgeons, then barber-surgeons, and finally apothecaries and other practitioners. (97) This is also loosely consistent with the organization of the Hospital Real de Coimbra, according to its regulations and the chapters of the university statutes (of 1559 and 1591) concerned with clinical studies. (98) However, there is evidence of the growth of an elite of learned surgeons whose professional activities were valued in equal terms to those of graduate physicians. The importance of barbersurgeons increased as the sixteenth century proceeded. Together with the sources above, Antonio da Cruz's Recopilacao de Curgia bears witness to the existence of a group of surgeons having a great deal in common with academic physicians. Antonio da Cruz studied surgery in Lisbon and in the Hospital of Guadalupe in Spain, and worked as a surgeon at the Hospital de Todos os Santos (1579-1626). (99) He seems to have been a pioneer among educated surgeons in Portugal. As noted earlier, he declared he had written his book in the vernacular to promote access to technical books by members of his class not skilled in Latin. Cruz was not, however, the only Portuguese surgeon to occupy a high position in the medical hierarchy. Furthermore, the nine editions of his Recopilacao de Curgia (1601-1711) constitute evidence of the increasing number of surgeons who sought books on surgery and were able to make use of them in the vernacular; but only the beginning of this development is within the temporal limits of this study. The earliest official document on apothecaries in Portugal is a law of 1450, in which they are included in a list of places to be visited by tax collectors. In 1461 a division of the areas of competence of physicians, surgeons and apothecaries was determined in a royal decree. Regulations for apothecaries in the city of Lisbon were issued in 1497. These, like the decree of 1461, determined that apothecaries should prepare prescriptions written by physicians and surgeons Physicians and surgeons are medical practitioners who treat illness and injury by prescribing medication, performing diagnostic tests and evaluations, performing surgery, and providing other medical services and advice. , but only apothecaries were allowed to sell such preparations. Among the instruments considered necessary for the practice of apothecaries, the regulations of 1497 list five books by Arabic and other medieval authors between the tenth and fourteenth centuries, including the fifth book of Avicenna's Canon and a medieval compilation of Dioscorides and Galen. (100) These determinations were loosely repeated in other laws of the sixteenth century. They occur, for example, in the Alvara sobre os Fisicos of 1561, referred to above. Like surgeons and barber-surgeons, the importance of apothecaries in the medical hierarchy seems to have grown during the sixteenth century. Miranda's Dialogo da perfeycam... refers to a law conferring 'equal dignity' to apothecaries and physicians. (101) The regulations and decrees mentioned in this section, as well as other sources such as the tract on astrological medicine from Valentim Fernandes' Reportorio dos Tempos, provide some information on the kinds of medical treatment generally practised in sixteenth-century Portugal. The Reportorio dos Tempos was an almanac containing useful day-to-day information for artisans. Its medical section is concerned with information on when and how phlebotomy, cupping and purgation should be performed. This was based on the doctrine of the influence of the twelve signs of the zodiac Signs of the Zodiac Constellation English Name Symbol Dates Aries The Ram &aries; Mar. 21–Apr. 19 Taurus The Bull &taur; Apr. 20–May 20 Gemini The Twins &gemin; May 21–June 21 on parts of the body. The existence of this kind of data in a widely circulated almanac suggests that it was likely to be the most relevant to surgeons, barber-surgeons and other practitioners. Like the medical section in the Reportorio, the Pratica de Barbeiros of Manoel Leytao (1604) describes phlebotomy as among the 'most profitable medicines'. Leytao remarks that Entre os remedios mais proveitosos, de que assim na Medicina, como na Chirurgia costumao os Medicos mais usar, he a sangria san·gri·a n. A cold drink made of red or white wine mixed with brandy, sugar, fruit juice, and soda water. Also called sangaree. [Probably from Spanish sangría, ; porque conforme a doutrina de todos, antes an·te n. 1. Games The stake that each poker player must put into the pool before receiving a hand or before receiving new cards. See Synonyms at bet. 2. que o remedio bocal se applica primeiro procede a evacuacao da sangria presuposto cristel, a assim a sangria he o melhor remedio, e o primeiro, que em as enfermidades se pode applicar. (102) That phlebotomy was also an important therapeutic practice among university-educated physicians of the time is testified to by the controversy between Pierre Brissot and the chief physician Dionysio (referred to above). Other aspects of Portuguese academic medical treatises are consistent with this. Phlebotomy is mentioned as a therapeutic procedure in all the medical texts I have studied. Finally, passages from Joao de Barros' Ropicapnefma suggest that therapies such as phlebotomy, cauterizing, and the application of ointments ointments, n.pl semisolid, non–water-based treatments that are not water-soluble and that create protective films to prevent dehydration of the skin. were current in Barros' context. (103) The range of healing techniques mentioned by Barros includes the use of theriac The´ri`ac n. 1. (Old Med.) An ancient composition esteemed efficacious against the effects of poison; especially, a certain compound of sixty-four drugs, prepared, pulverized, and reduced by means of honey to an electuary; - called , the all-purpose medicine known to have been prescribed from late antiquity Late Antiquity is a rough periodization (c. AD 300 - 600) used by historians and other scholars to describe the interval between Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages in both mainland Europe and the Mediterranean world: generally between the decline of the western Roman Empire onwards. Theriac contained a great and varying number of ingredients, the principal one being viper's flesh. (104) The relationship between Jews and medicine requires some comment, since Jewish practitioners were numerous in Portugal and many academic physicians belonged to this group. Here I shall focus on the intellectual domain. The preponderance pre·pon·der·ance also pre·pon·der·an·cy n. Superiority in weight, force, importance, or influence. Noun 1. preponderance of Jews in Portuguese medicine appears to be connected with the general historical relaiton of the Jewish people with medicine and medical practice. The great number of Jewish practitioners in sixteenth-century Portugal is partly due to the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. (105) However, long before this date Portuguese kings employed Jewish medical practitioners and there were many of them, as well as Jewish surgeons, in the kingdom. (106) The compulsory mass baptism of Jews at the end of the fifteenth century initially contributed to an increase in the economic and professional importance of the Jewish community in Portuguese society. During the period preceding the height of the Inquisition Inquisition (ĭn'kwĭzĭsh`ən), tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church established for the investigation of heresy. The Medieval Inquisition In the early Middle Ages investigation of heresy was a duty of the bishops. , Jewish scholars, officially considered 'neo-Christians' but in certain cases secretly preserving Hebrew tradition and custom, occupied prominent positions at court and in the university. For example, Antonio Luiz and Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga, to mention two doctors whose works are analysed in this study, taught at the university despite being descendants DESCENDANTS. Those who have issued from an individual, and include his children, grandchildren, and their children to the remotest degree. Ambl. 327 2 Bro. C. C. 30; Id. 230 3 Bro. C. C. 367; 1 Rop. Leg. 115; 2 Bouv. n. 1956. 2. of Jewish families. If Veiga's family had long severed relations with the Jewish faith, this seems not to have been the case with Antonio Luiz, whose Jewish ancestry was well known at the time. (107) The Jewish physicians Rodrigo de Castro and Garcia Lopes were held in high esteem among the Portuguese political elite. (108) Thus it may be said that the usual distinction between Jewish and Christian doctors, with the former excluded from the university, does not readily apply to Portugal. (109) Yet the only physician in whose work influences from the Hebrew religion and custom are found, Rodrigo de Castro, (110) was not a university teacher before leaving Portugal to live in Hamburg Hamburg, city, Germany Hamburg (häm`b rkh), officially Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg (Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg), city (1994 pop. (c. 1588).
Much has been said of the historical relation of Jews to the knowledge and practice of medicine in various times and places, and in the Iberian peninsula during the medieval and Renaissance periods in particular. For this reason, some of the first questions I attempted to address in this study were: Is there a specific Jewish tradition in medicine? If so, of what does it consist? The answers to these questions are not straightforward. As noted by Harry Friedenwald, 'no medical works have come down to us from the ancient Hebrews. Our only sources of knowledge are such medical and hygienic hy·gien·ic adj. 1. Of or relating to hygiene. 2. Tending to promote or preserve health. 3. Sanitary. references as are found in their sacred, historical and legal literature', of which the Bible is the most prominent. (111) Friedenwald provides evidence of the presence of Jewish physicians in Christian and Islamic societies The term Islamic Society has several different meanings:
In the history of medicine, Islamic medicine or Arabic medicine refers to medicine developed in the medieval Islamic civilisation and written in Arabic. . Only a number of medical and medico-religious practices, particularly in the field of hygiene (baths, the direct prophylaxis prophylaxis (prō'fĭlăk`sĭs), measures designed to prevent the occurrence of disease or its dissemination. Some examples of prophylaxis are immunization against serious diseases such as smallpox or diphtheria; quarantine to confine of disease, the weekly day of rest), seem to have originated in ancient Jewish tradition. Thus it may be said that, strictly speaking Adv. 1. strictly speaking - in actual fact; "properly speaking, they are not husband and wife" properly speaking, to be precise , no separate Hebrew tradition in medicine developed and was received in Europe in the manner of the development and transmission of a Greco-Islamic tradition. Isaac Judaeus (c. 850-c. 940), born in Egypt, and Moses Maimonides (1135-1204), who was born in Cordova Cordova, Spain: see Córdoba. and spent most of his adult life in Egypt, are two distinguished Jewish medical writers of the Middle Ages whose work testifies to the reliance of Jewish doctors upon ancient Greek medicine. The sixth aphorism of Judaeus' 'Guide for Physicians' (Musar Harofim) states that 'the best physician is he who busies himself in reading attentively most of the writings of the ancient physicians, especially the works of Galen, the prince of physicians'. The eleventh aphorism expresses the Hippocratic-Galenic confidence in nature's healing power: 'the physician does not make the cure. He merely prepares and clears the way for Nature, who is the real healer'. (113) Maimonides, whose principal medical work is the Aphorisms according to Galen, also shared the esteem for Greek physicians, especially Galen. (114) Both Judaeus and Maimonides had strong connections with Arabic medicine, the latter having written all his medical works in Arabic. (115) A consequence of this, in the context of sixteenth-century Portugal, is that in general no influence other than Greco-Arabic, which could itself be said to have derived from a specific Hebrew medical tradition, is found in academic medical texts. The pre-eminent role of Jewish practitioners in Portugal is distinguished by its complex intersections with ethnic-religious conflicts between Christians and Jews. This is illustrated in a passage from Joao de Barros' Ropicapnefma, in which one character, who argues in support of secular values, the 'Will', asks ironically: 'Qual foi o medico judeu ou mouro que nao fosse a sua vista mais saudavel a um cristao infermo que a dum triste triste adj. Sad; wistful. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin tristis.] triste Adjective Old-fashioned sad [French] e carregado confessor CONFESSOR, evid. A priest of some Christian sect, who receives an account of the sins of his people, and undertakes to give them absolution of their sins. 2. ?'. (116) From the end of the fifteenth century some sources indicate an increasing distrust and suspicion of 'neo-Christian' physicians and apothecaries in Portugal. Royal decrees are one such source. In 1498, Manuel I Manuel I, 1469–1521, king of Portugal Manuel I, 1469–1521, king of Portugal (1495–1521), successor of John II. Manuel's reign was most notable for the successful continuation of Portugal's overseas enterprises. , in response to a request of the assembly of nobles, commons and the clergy, forbade for·bade v. A past tense of forbid. forbade or forbad Verb the past tense of forbid forbade forbid practitioners and apothecaries to write prescriptions in foreign languages. A decree of 1524, by Joao III, forbade possession of Hebrew books except for physicians and surgeons who did not know Latin, who were then allowed to retain their Hebrew medical books. (117) Measures such as these, restrictive and at the same time protective of the activities of converts, suggest that conflicting attitudes of antagonism antagonism /an·tag·o·nism/ (an-tag´o-nizm) opposition or contrariety between similar things, as between muscles, medicines, or organisms; cf. antibiosis. an·tag·o·nism n. and dependence existed towards them on the part of the Christian population. The source for the most regrettable series of events testifying to Christian antagonism to Jewish practitioners is the Portuguese Inquisitional in·qui·si·tion n. 1. The act of inquiring into a matter; an investigation. See Synonyms at inquiry. 2. Law a. An inquest. b. The verdict of a judicial inquiry. 3. a. Rolls. Based on these records Harry Friedenwald notes that 'the idea that Jewish and Neo-Christian physicians deliberately poisoned their patients gradually developed into an elaborate myth which gained force with the confessions secured under torture'. Many were burnt at the stake after confessing to the murder of Christians. Many others left Portugal to settle elsewhere in Europe, often reverting to Judaism. (118) The departure of so many Jews is regarded by some authors cited in this article as a factor contributing to the Portuguese cultural decline in the second half of the sixteenth century, in as much as it deprived Portugal of important scholars. As regards medicine, there is every indication that distinguished physicians such as Amatus Lusitanus, Rodrigo de Castro, and Garcia Lopes left Portugal because of religious persecution. (119) Generally, since medical procedures of varying kinds were to a great extent performed by Jews, persecution and distrust had an adverse effect upon Portuguese medicine as a whole. As in Spain, where Arabic medicine suffered as a result of religious persecution, in Portugal conditions became progressively less favourable to the preservation and development of medical scholarship and practice among Jewish practitioners. (120) Furthermore, such conditions are said to have discredited dis·cred·it tr.v. dis·cred·it·ed, dis·cred·it·ing, dis·cred·its 1. To damage in reputation; disgrace. 2. To cause to be doubted or distrusted. 3. To refuse to believe. n. the medical profession in the eyes of the Portuguese people The Portuguese people (Portuguese: os portugueses; literally the Portuguese) are the ethnic group or nation native to the country of Portugal, in the west of the Iberian peninsula of south-west Europe. . (121) The magnitude of ethnic-religious intolerance of Jews and its adverse effect upon scholarship are distinctive features of sixteenth century Portugal, in relation to other European countries. There is every reason to believe that these were decisive factors Noun 1. decisive factor - a point or fact or remark that settles something conclusively clincher causal factor, determinant, determining factor, determinative, determiner - a determining or causal element or factor; "education is an important determinant of contributing to the direction in which medicine developed in Portugal at the end of the sixteenth century, which were by no means mirrored elsewhere in Europe. Developments in Portuguese medicine did not progress with changes in attitudes, moving towards the pre-eminence of empirical observation and experiment, which had generally occurred in Europe. Another factor that appears to have contributed to the distinctive developments of Portuguese medicine is the revival of Aristotelianism advanced by the Jesuit Fathers, which implied the reinforcement of the traditional model of education in theology, law and science that prevailed from the end of the sixteenth century. An aspect of the growth of the Society of Jesus Society of Jesus Roman Catholic religious order distinguished in foreign missions. [Christian Hist.: NCE, 1412] See : Missionary was its competition with the university for the dominant role in scholarly education. This affected the position of the university as the leading academic institution in Portugal. Let us consider the specific conditions of the medical faculty together with changes in the university as a whole since, in general, the growth of specialized medical education was closely related to the development of medicine as a discipline and as a profession. (122) Concerning the course of medicine in particular, the Portuguese university had long competed with Spanish universities This article or section recently underwent a major revision or rewrite and needs further review. You can help! Several of the world's oldest universities are located in Spain or were founded by Spanish scholars across the world at the time of the Spanish Empire. , particularly the University of Salamanca The University of Salamanca (Spanish: Universidad de Salamanca), located in the town of Salamanca, west of Madrid, is the second oldest university in Spain (the first one is the university of Palencia, now disappeared), and one of the oldest in Europe. , which became renowned for medical teaching in the sixteenth century and offered a much shorter course in medicine than Coimbra. For these reasons, the medical faculty of Salamanca was in many ways preferred to Coimbra by both Portuguese and Spanish students. (123) Most of the medical writers referred to here graduated from Salamanca. Competition from Spanish universities in general also seems to have been a factor in the decline of medicine in Portugal. Developments in branches of medicine, approaches and concepts were in many ways related to the more general cultural and institutional aspects outlined above. It is generally accepted that Renaissance medicine is distinct from medieval medicine
Historical developments in the institutional and intellectual context outlined in this article are suggested by dates and places of publication of the medical treatises studied. Aside from Cruz's Recopilacao de Curgia (1601), the last two medical texts published in Portugal within the period of this study are Miranda's Dialogo da perfeycam...(1562) and Veigas's Commentarij in libros Claud. Galeni duos, de febrium differentijs (1578). From the date of the publication of the Dialogo da perfeycam... onwards, medical works by Portuguese authors were mainly published in Antwerp, where some of the Portuguese Jewish community had emigrated, and also in Hamburg, Lyons and Salamanca. As already suggested, factors contributing to these developments include the dependence on patronage and control by the sovereign, whose capacity to promote a wide number of projects was limited by political and economic reasons; the restoration of Aristotelian scholasticism; and the general decline of Portuguese society in the second half of the sixteenth century. Along with these, the exodus of Jews from Portugal represented a significant academic loss as a whole, and to medicine in particular. It might perhaps be said that, by the end of the sixteenth century, Portuguese medical authors existed almost exclusively outside Portugal, in the European countries in which many of them had settled. Portuguese doctors continued their work in more tolerant communities elsewhere in Europe. By accepting them, some of these communities created the conditions for an intellectual flourishing that would not occur in Portugal. (124) (1) Jeronimo de Miranda, Dialogo da perfeycam e partes que sam necessarias ao bom medico (Lisbon: 1562), fols [10.sup.v]-[16.sup.r]. (2) Ian Maclean, The Renaissance Notion of Woman: A study in the fortunes of scholasticism and medical science in European intellectual life (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). , 1987), p. 2. (3) Miranda, fol. [4.sup.r]. (4) Antonio Luiz, Problematum libri quinq (Lisbon: 1539). (5) Enrique de Cuellar, Ad libros tres predictionum Hippocr. (Coimbra: 1543). (6) Afonso Rodrigues de Guevara, In pluribus ex ijs quibus Galenus impugnatur ab Andrea Vesalio Bruxelesi in costructione & usu partium corporis humani, defensio (Coimbra: 1559). There was only one university in Portugal during the period covered by this study. Since its foundation in the late thirteenth century it had been sited alternately in Coimbra and Lisbon. The direct interference in the running of the university by the king appears to have begun during the reign of Manuel I (1495-1521), who promulgated new statutes c. 1504. In 1537, on the initiative of King Joao III, the university was transferred to Coimbra. The king was regarded as being deeply committed to its improvement, and was not only responsible for providing better material conditions such as installations and funds, but also appointing some of the staff. See A. Tavares de Sousa, 'A Transferencia da Universidade para Coimbra em 1537 e o Ensino da Medicina', in A Sociedade e a Cultura de Coimbra no Renascimento (Actas do Simposio Internacional) (Coimbra: Epartur, 1982), pp. 165-93 (pp. 166-67). The Society of Jesus in Evora founded a university in 1559, but its activities, begun some years later, are only of marginal interest to this study. See Antonio Jose Saraiva, Historia da Cultura em Portugal, 3 vols (Lisbon: 1950-62), ii, 208. (7) Thomaz Rodrigues de Veiga, Opera omnia in Galeni libros edita (Lyons: 1587; Lyons: 1593). (8) Pierre Brissot, Apologetica disceptatio, qua docetur per quae loca sanguis mitti debeat in visceru inflammationibus, presertim in pleuritite (Paris: 1525). (9) Antonio Luiz, De Re Medica Opera (Lisbon: 1540). (10) Garcia Lopes, Commentarii De Varia Rei Medicae Lectione (Antwerp: 1564). (11) Alberto da Rocha Brito, A Faculdade de Medicina no Seculo XVI (Coimbra: Coimbra Editora, 1937), pp. 5-15; Jose Sebastiao da Silva Dias, Os Descobrimentos e a Problematica Cultural do Seculo XVI (Lisbon: Presenca, 1988), pp. 43-44. (12) On the relationship of Brissot and Veiga with the Portuguese royal family, see respectively Maximiano Lemos, Historia da Medicina em Portugal: Doutrinas e Instituicoes, 2 vols (Lisbon: 1899), I, 302; and Harry Friedenwald, 'The Doctors Da Veiga', in Friedenwald, The Jews and Medicine. Essays, 2 vols (New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : Ktav Publishing House; Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C. Press, 1967), I, 290-94. (13) Garcia Lopes, fol. [6.sup.v]. (14) Guevara, dedication. On anatomical dissection as entertainment in the mid-sixteenth century, see Luke Wilson, 'William Harvey's Prelectiones: The Performance of the Body in the Renaissance Theater of Anatomy', Representations, 17 (1987), 62-95 (p. 69). (15) Guevara, p. 269. (16) On Guevara, see Lemos, I, 221-23; S. Costa Santos, O Inicio da Escola de Cirurgia do Hospital Real de Todos os Santos The Hospital Real de Todos os Santos (All Saints Royal Hospital) was a major hospital in Lisbon, Portugal. The hospital was built between 1492 and 1504 and was destroyed in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, along with most of the city. , 1504-1565 (Lisbon: 1925), p. 23; Rocha Brito, pp. 56-62. (17) J. M. Teixeira de Carvalho, 'A Anatomia em Coimbra no Seculo XVI', Revista da Universidade de Coimbra, 2 (1913), 540-64 (p. 544). (18) Henrique Jorge Henriques, Retrato del Perfecto Medico (Salamanca: 1595), p. 117. On praise of Veiga in medical works, see Lemos, Historia da Medicina, I, 313. (19) Thomaz Rodrigues da Veiga, Tomvs primvs Commentariorvm in Clavdii Galeni opera,... Complectens interpretationem Artis medicae, & librorum sex De locis affectis (Antwerp: 1564); Commentarij in libros Claud. Galeni duos, de febrium differentijs (Coimbra: 1578); Commentarii in libros Hippocratis de victus ratione (Lyons: 1586); Opera omnia. (20) Veiga, Opera omnia, preface. (21) Paul Oskar Kristeller Paul Oskar Kristeller (May 22, 1905 in Berlin - July 7, 1999 in New York, USA) was an important scholar of Renaissance humanism. He was last active as Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Columbia University in New York. , Renaissance Thought and the Arts (Princeton: Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research Facilities Press, 1990), pp. 69-88. (22) Americo da Costa The surname da Costa derives from the Portuguese word for coast. It may refer to:
(23) Manuel Goncalves Cerejeira, O Renascimento em Portugal. Clenardo, 2 vols (Coimbra: Coimbra Editora, 1974-75), I, 13-16. (24) Saraiva, II, 189-91. (25) Kristeller, p. 73. (26) Joaquim de Vasconcellos, Albrecht Durer e a sua Influencia na Peninsula (Coimbra: Imprensa da Universidade, 1929), p. 50. (27) Cerejeira, II, 136. (28) For a fuller account of humanism in Portugal in the Renaissance, see L'Humanisme Portugais et l'Europe. (29) David W. Waters, 'Science and the Techniques of Navigation in the Renaissance', in Art, Science and History in the Renaissance, ed. by Charles S Charles, archduke of Austria Charles, 1771–1847, archduke of Austria; brother of Holy Roman Emperor Francis II. Despite his epilepsy, he was the ablest Austrian commander in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars; however, he was handicapped by . Singleton sin·gle·ton n. An offspring born alone. singleton Medtalk One baby. Cf Triplet, Twin. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1967), pp. 189-237 (p. 197). (30) See Luis de Albuquerque, 'Sobre o Empirismo Cientifico em Portugal no Seculo XVI', in A Sociedade e a Cultura de Coimbra, pp. 9-25; and 'Science et Humanisme...', in L'Humanisme Portugais et l'Europe. (31) Kristeller, pp. 90-91. (32) Nicola Abbagnano, 'Renaissance Humanism', in Dictionary of the History of Ideas The history of ideas is a field of research in history that deals with the expression, preservation, and change of human ideas over time. The history of ideas is a sister-discipline to, or a particular approach within, intellectual history. , ed. by P. P. Wiener, 5 vols (New York: Scribner, 1973), IV, 129-36 (p. 131). (33) Brian Vickers Brian Lee Vickers is an American NASCAR driver, from Thomasville, North Carolina. Vickers was the 2003 Busch Series champion, and at age 20, the youngest champion in any of NASCAR's three top-tier series. He currently drives the #83 Red Bull Toyota Camry for Team Red Bull. , 'Introduction', in Occult and Scientific Mentalities in the Renaissance, ed. by Brian Vickers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984), pp. 1-55 (pp. 3, 6). (34) See Helder Macedo, Do Significado Oculto da Menina e Moca (Lisbon: Moraes, 1977), pp. 128-29. (35) Garcia Lopes, fol. [1.sup.v]. (36) Luiz, fol. [3.sup.r]. (37) Owsei Temkin Owsei Temkin (October 6, 1902 – July 18, 2002) was a Russian-born, German-educated, American medical historian. He served as director of the Institute of the History of Medicine and was the William H. , Galenism: Rise and Decline of a Medical Philosophy (Ithaca and London: 1973), p. 100; R. K. French, 'De Juvamentis Membrorum and the Reception of Galenic Physiological Anatomy', Isis, 70 (1979), 96-109 (p. 97). (38) Guevara, pp. 151, 171; Garcia Lopes, fol. 73v; Miranda, fols [17.sup.r]-[17.sup.v]. (39) On Pierre Brissot and his controversy with Dionysio, see J. B. de C. M. Saunders and C. D. O'Malley, 'Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis: The Bloodletting bloodletting, also called bleeding, practice of drawing blood from the body in the treatment of disease. General bloodletting consists of the abstraction of blood by incision into an artery (arteriotomy) or vein (venesection, or phlebotomy). Letter of 1539', in Studies and Essays in the History of Science and Learning, Offered in Homage to George Sarton George Alfred Leon Sarton (1884-1956) was a Belgian-American polymath, historian of science, and father of the writer, May Sarton. He wrote the seminal classic works, History of Science, The Study of the History of Science on the Occasion of his Sixtieth Birthday, ed. by Montague Francis Ashley Montagu (New York: Schuman, 1947), pp. 3-74 (pp. 12-19); Lemos, I, 301-04; and Ricardo Jorge, 'Comentos a Vida, Obra e Epoca de Amato Lusitano', Arquivos de Historia da Medicina Portuguesa, New Series, 5th-7th years, (1914-16), vii, 49-52; and 'A Renascenca medica em Portugal (Pierre Brissot e Amato Lusitano João Rodrigues de Castelo Branco, better known as Amato Lusitano and Amatus Lusitanus (1511–1568), was a notable Portuguese Jewish physician of the 16th century. )', Lusitania, 1 (1924), 187-92. The article by Saunders and O'Malley also deals with the concept of pleurisy pleurisy (pl r`ĭsē), inflammation of the pleura (the membrane that covers the lungs and lines the chest cavity). It is sometimes accompanied by pain and coughing. . For Galen's views on the therapeutic
properties of phlebotomy, see Jerome J. Bylebyl, 'The Medical Side
of Harvey's Discovery: The Normal and the Abnormal', in
William Harvey and His Age: The Professional and Social Context of the
Discovery of the Circulation, ed. by J. J. Bylebyl (Baltimore and
London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979), pp. 28-102 (pp. 42-43).
(40) See, for example, Rodrigo de Castro, De universa mulierum Medicina... (Hamburg: 1603), pp. 27, 37, 65. (41) Lopes, fols [75.sup.r]-[78.sup.v]. (42) Maclean, p. 4. (43) Miranda, fols [9.sup.r]-[9.sup.v]. (44) Luis Lobera de A vila, Libro de Anatomia. Declaration en suma breve BREVE, practice. A writ in which the cause of action is briefly stated, hence its name. Fleta, lib. 2, c. 13, Sec. 25; Co. Lit. 73 b. 2. Writs are distributed into several classes. de la organica y maravillosa composition del microcosmo o menor mundo, que es el hombre, ordenada por artificio maravilloso em forma forma, adj/n minor elements between the members of a botanical species. de sueno o ficcion (1542); and Bernardino de Monserrate, Libro de la Anathomia del hobre (Valladolid: 1550). See Luis de Pina, 'As "Anatomias" de Avila (1542) e Monserrate (1550) e a "Microcosmografia" de Falcao de Resende', reprinted from Jornal do Medico, 41 (1942); and A Cultura Anatomica em Portugal no Seculo XVI e a 'Microcosmografia' de Andre Falcao de Resende (Coimbra: 1946), p. 61. (45) R. Palmer, 'Pharmacy in the republic of Venice The Most Serene Republic of Venice (Italian: Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia, Venetian: Republica de Venesia in the sixteenth century', in The Medical Renaissance of the Sixteenth Century, ed. by Andrew Wear, Roger French and Iain Lonie (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), pp. 100-17. (46) Siraisi, p. 17. See also Nancy G. Siraisi, 'The changing fortunes of a traditional text: goals and strategies in sixteenth-century Latin editions of the Canon of Avicenna', in Wear et al., pp. 16-41; and Wear, 'Explorations...', in Wear et al., pp. 118-45. (47) Vivian Nutton, 'Humanist surgery', in Wear et al., pp. 75-99. (48) Antonio da Cruz, 'Prologue', in Recopilacao de Cirvgia, 4th edn (Lisbon: 1630), reproduced in Costa Santos, A Escola de Cirurgia do Hospital Real de Todos os Santos 1565-1775 (Lisbon: 1925), p. 7. (49) 'Introduction', in Wear et al., p. ix. (50) Estatutos da Universidade de Coimbra (1559), (Coimbra: Universidade de Coimbra, 1963). On the practices of both the northern and the Italian model regarding the relationship between arts and medicine at the Portuguese university, see Silva Dias, A Politica Politica is the undergraduate journal of the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Politica solicits original student essays on topics broadly political. Cultural da Epoca de D. Joao III, 2 vols (Coimbra: 1969), I, Chapter 5. On other European universities, see Schmitt, 'Aristotle among the physicians', in Wear et al., pp. 1-15 (p. 271, note 1). (51) Estatutos da Universidade... (1559), pp. 314-21. (52) N. G. Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press The University of Chicago Press is the largest university press in the United States. It is operated by the University of Chicago and publishes a wide variety of academic titles, including The Chicago Manual of Style, dozens of academic journals, including , 1990), p. 66; Schmitt, p. 4. (53) Schmitt, pp. 2-3. (54) Images used by medical writers to express their views on this question are examined in Ligia Bellini, 'Representations of the Human Body in Sixteenth-Century Portugal' (unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Essex The University of Essex is a British plate glass university. It received its Royal Charter in 1965. The university's main campus is located at Wivenhoe Park on the outskirts of Colchester (the oldest recorded town in Britain) in the English county of Essex, less than a mile from , 1992), Chapter 5. (55) P. De Lacy, 'Galen's Platonism', American Journal of Philology American Journal of Philology (AJP) is an academic journal founded in 1880 by the renowned classical scholar Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve. It is widely recognized as a top research publication in the field of philology, and related areas of classical literature, , 93 (1972), 29; also 27-39. (56) Panagyrica oratio elegantissima (Lisbon: 1539). For biographical information on Antonio Luiz, see Luis de Pina, O Quinhentista Professor Antonio Luis na Historia da Psicologia e da Psiquiatria (Coimbra: 1957); and Silva Dias, I, 228-39. (57) This is expressed in the epigram epigram, a short, polished, pithy saying, usually in verse, often with a satiric or paradoxical twist at the end. The term was originally applied by the Greeks to the inscriptions on stones. accompanying the Problematum libri quinq, 'Sed tamen abstrusas rerum cognoscere causas/ Dum studeo...', fol. [2.sup.v]; and in his De Occvltis Proprietatibus (Lisbon: 1540). (58) Silva Dias, I, 229-30. (59) Luiz, De Re Medica..., fol. [91.sup.r]. (60) On Pietro d'Abano's Conciliator, see Schmitt, pp. 3-4 and note 18. The Conciliator is referred to by Luiz in De Re Medica..., fols [109.sup.r]-[15.sup.r]. (61) It is important to note, however, that this was not always the case. See Bellini, Chapter 4. (62) Henriques, pp. 212-15. (63) Antonio Joaquim Anselmo, Bibliografia das Obras Impressas em Portugal no Seculo XVI (Lisbon: Biblioteca Nacional, 1926) refers to twelve editions (numbers 113, 229, 231, 238, 408, 558, 566, 578, 628, 647, 666, and 679) between 1518 and 1593. Alberto Navarro refers to nine editions, between 1518 and 1573; he also quotes J. Bensaude's opinion that there existed eleven sixteenth-century editions of the Reportorio: 'Os Reportorios dos Tempos', in Navarro, Ensaios Bio-Bibliograficos (Lisbon: 1961), pp. 9-57 (pp. 23-28). (64) For an analysis of the medical contents of the Reportorio dos Tempos, see Bellini, pp. 133-38. (65) Miranda, fols [10.sup.v]-[11.sup.r.] (66) Wear et al., p. xi. (67) Bellini, Chapter 5. (68) Garcia Lopes, fols [41.sup.r]-[44.sup.r] (fol. 42r). (69) An analysis of Barros' Ropicapnefma from the point of view of the medical knowledge of the time is found in Y. David-Peyre, 'Le Theme de la Maladie et le Personnage du Medecin dans Ropica Pnefma', Bulletin des Etudes Portugaises, 27, New Series (1966), 89-118. (70) Joao de Barros, Ropicapnefma (Lisbon: 1532), facsimile edition, modernized text, notes and study by Israel S Israel, in the Bible Israel (ĭz`rēəl, ĭz`rāəl) [as understood by Hebrews,=he strives with God], according to the book of Genesis, name given to Jacob as eponymous ancestor of the Hebrews, the chosen people of God. . Revah, 2 vols (Lisbon: 1952, 1955), II, 34; also 29-34. According to Barros, 'Ropicapnefma' is an expression derived from Greek meaning 'spiritual merchandise' (p. 6). (71) See Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine, p. 82. (72) Andre Falcao de Resende, Microcosmographia (Coimbra: [1865]), pp. 3-62 (Canto can·to n. pl. can·tos One of the principal divisions of a long poem. [Italian, from Latin cantus, song; see canticle. II. 25-26). (73) Luiz, De Re Medica..., fol. 81v. See also Galeni liber falso adscriptus an animal sit id, quod in utero est, in Claudii Galeni Opera Omnia, ed. by C. G. Kuhn, 20 vols (Leipzig: 1821-33), XIX, 158-81. (74) Castro (list of authors quoted in the book). (75) Geoffrey Ernest Richard Lloyd, Polarity (1) The direction of charged particles, which may determine the binary status of a bit. (2) In micrographics, the change in the light to dark relationship of an image when copies are made. and Analogy: Two Types of Argumentation in Early Greek Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966): see the conclusion to Part Three. Also relevant regarding the use of analogy in science are Agnes Arber Agnes Robertson Arber (1879-1960) was a renowned British plant morphologist and anatomist, historian of botany and philosopher of biology. She was born in London but lived most of her life in Cambridge, including the last 51 years of her life. , 'Analogy in the History of Science', in Studies and Essays [...] Offered in Homage to George Sarton, pp. 219-33; and Mary Brenda Hesse, Models and Analogies in Science (Notre Dame Notre Dame IPA: [nɔtʁ dam] is French for Our Lady, referring to the Virgin Mary. In the United States of America, Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press The University of Notre Dame Press is a university press that is part of the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, United States. External link
(76) Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences (London: 1989), p. 78. For the relationship between language and reality as a key issue in the differentiation between occult and scientific cognitive processes Cognitive processes Thought processes (i.e., reasoning, perception, judgment, memory). Mentioned in: Psychosocial Disorders , see Vickers, 'Analogy versus identity: the rejection of occult symbolism, 1580-1680', in Occult and Scientific Mentalities, pp. 95-163. (77) This issue is explored in more depth in Bellini, Chapter 5. (78) Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine, p. 192. (79) Lemos, pp. 170-79; Rocha Brito, pp. 21-22. (80) Estatutos da Universidade... (1559), pp. 295-302. (81) Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine, p. 152. (82) Estatutos da Universidade... (1559), pp. 300-02. On anatomical studies at the University of Coimbra, see also Rocha Brito 'As primeiras disseccoes humanas na Universidade de Coimbra. O primeiro teatro anatomico', Folia fo·li·a n. Plural of folium. Anatomica Vniversitatis Conimbrigensis, 17 (1942), note 4. (83) French, p. 109. (84) Miranda, fols [13.sup.r]-[13.sup.v]; Henriques, pp. 208-10. (85) Henriques, p. 212. (86) Cruz, Recopilacam de Cirurgia (Lisbon: 1688), pp. 23-24. For a discussion of the notion of the rete mirabile and its function, see Temkin, pp. 141-42. (87) Cruz, pp. 25, 34, 35. (88) Charles Webster
Sir Charles Kingsley Webster (25 July 1886 – 1961) was a British historian and diplomat. , The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine and Reform 1626-1660 (London: Duckworth, 1975), p. 121. (89) Rocha Brito, A Faculdade..., pp. 22-26; and Estatutos da Universidade... (1559), pp. 311-14. (90) Teixeira de Carvalho, III, 581-82. (91) In 1540, the Faculty of Medicine had only ten students, out of a total of 612 in the entire University of Coimbra. Teophilo Braga, Historia da Universidade de Coimbra nas suas relacoes com a instrucao publica portuguesa, 4 vols (Lisbon: 1892-1902), I, 466. One should note, however, that many Portuguese physicians graduated from the University of Salamanca. (92) Svmmario e qve brevemente se contem alguas covsas (assi ecclesiaticas como secvlares) que han a cidade de Lisboa (c. 1552), quoted in Costa Santos, 'Sobre barbeiros sangradores do hospital de Lisboa', Arquivos de Historia da Medicina Portuguesa, New Series, 12th year (1921), pp. 129-35 and 171-82; 13th year (1922), pp. 1-19, 7. (93) Henriques, p. 110. (94) M. Ferreira de Mira, Historia da Medicina Portuguesa (Lisbon: 1947), pp. 99-100. (95) Lemos, I, 78-81, 189-91, 211-12; Tavares de Sousa, p. 168; Alvara sobre os Fisicos, Lisbon, 12 July 1561; Ley LEY. This word is old French, a corruption of loi, and signifies law; for example, Termes de la Ley, Terms of the Law. In another, and an old technical sense, ley signifies an oath, or the oath with compurgators; as, il tend sa ley aiu pleyntiffe. Brit. c. 27. passada nouamente sobre os fisicos da vniuersidade de Coimbra anno de 1566, Lisbon, 28 April 1566. (96) Ruy Diaz d'Ysla, Tractado cotra el mal serpentino... (Sevilla: 1539); and Oliveira, Svmmario..., quoted in Lemos, I, 155-59; and an excerpt ex·cerpt n. A passage or segment taken from a longer work, such as a literary or musical composition, a document, or a film. tr.v. ex·cerpt·ed, ex·cerpt·ing, ex·cerpts 1. from Francisco Moncon, El principe christiano (1544), Archivos de Historia da Medicina Portuguesa (1894), IV, 20-26. (97) Lemos, I, 155-60; Costa Santos, O Inicio da Escola...; and 'Sobre barbeiros...'. (98) Teixeira de Carvalho, III, 582; Estatutos da Universidade...(1559), pp. 311-14; and Rocha Brito, A Faculdade..., pp. 23-26. (99) Lemos, II, 9; Costa Santos, A Escola..., pp. 4-6. (100) Ferreira de Mira, pp. 57-59. (101) Miranda, fol. [10.sup.r]. (102) Pratica de Barbeiros (Lisbon: 1604), quoted in Costa Santos, 'Sobre barbeiros...', pp. 129-30. (103) Barros, pp. 39, 47, 79, 134. (104) For a description of the theriac, see Charles Joseph Charles Joseph is an American jazz trombone player from New Orleans, Louisiana. The son of trombonist Waldren "Frog" Joseph, he has played with the Majestic Band and Tornado Brass Band, and was one of the founding members of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. Singer and Edgar Ashworth Underwood, A Short History of Medicine (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962), pp. 675-76. (105) Jorge, pp. 19-20; and Pina, 'Alguns Aspectos Historicos das Relacoes Medicas Luso-Espanholas', Revista de Las Ciencias, 18 (1952), 397-411 (pp. 398-99). (106) Ferreira de Mira, pp. 50-52; Friedenwald, 'History of the Jewish physicians of Spain, Portugal and Southeastern France', in Friedenwald, II, 613-700 (pp. 691-94). (107) Silva Dias, A Politica Cultural..., I, 229. (108) Lemos, I, 257-59, 307. (109) On the exclusion of Jews from teaching in faculties of medicine in Europe, see Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine, pp. 58-59. (110) Bellini, Chapter 4. (111) Friedenwald, 'The Bibliography of Ancient Hebrew Medicine', in Friedenwald, I, 99-145 (p. 99). (112) Friedenwald, 'Jewish physicians in Italy: their relation to the Papal and Italian states', pp. 551-612 (pp. 551-88), and 'History of the Jewish physicians of Spain...' both in Friedenwald, II. See also Siraisi, Medieval and Early Renaissance Medicine, pp. 29-31. (113) 'Guide for Physicians (Musar Harofim) by Isaac Judaeus ([880]-[932]). Translated from the Hebrew, with Introduction, by Saul Jarcho', Bulletin of the History of Medicine Bulletin of the History of Medicine is an academic journal founded in 1925. Since 1939, it has served as the official publication of the American Association for the History of Medicine. , 15 (1944), 180-88 (pages 183 and 184 respectively). (114) Friedenwald, 'Moses Maimonides the Physician', in Friedenwald, I, 193-216 (pp. 201-16). (115) Friedenwald, 'Moses Maimonides the Physician' and 'Manuscript copies of the medical works of Isaac Israeli', in Friedenwald, I, 185-92. (116) Barros, II, 28. (117) Friedenwald, 'History of the Jewish physicians of Spain...', in Friedenwald, II, 696. (118) Friedenwald, 'History of the Jewish physicians of Spain...', in Friedenwald, II, 697-98. (119) Lemos, I, 228, 259, 307. (120) On morisco medicine as part of the general process of alienation of morisco culture in sixteenth-century Spain, see L. Garcia Ballester, Historia social de la medicina en la Espana de los siglos XIII al XVI (Madrid: 1976), I; and 'Academicism versus empiricism in practical medicine in sixteenth-century Spain with regard to morisco practitioners', in Wear et al., pp. 246-70. (121) Lemos, I, 185. (122) For the classic example of Italy, see Bylebyl, 'The School of Padua: humanistic medicine humanistic medicine Patient-centered medicine Social medicine A philosophy in medicine which encompasses positive mentoring skills, community service, compassion and sensitivity, collaboration, observation of professional ethics in the sixteenth century', in Health, medicine, and mortality in the sixteenth century, ed. by Charles Webster (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979), pp. 335-70 (pp. 336-38). (123) Lemos, I, 182-84; and Jorge, pp. 40-62. (124) I received financial support from the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico--CNPq, of the Ministry for Science and Technology of Brazil, for this research. LIGIA BELLINI UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DA BAHIA The Universidade Federal da Bahia (Federal University of Bahia or UFBA) is a public university located mainly in Salvador, state of Bahia, Brazil. It is the most important university in that state. |
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