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Thomas Bartholin. The Anatomy House in Copenhagen

Fink-Jensen, Morten(Introduction by)Bruun, Niels W.(Edited by)Fisher, Peter(Translated by)
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In 1644, the University of Copenhagen established its first anatomical theatre.

In addition to the instruction of students, research was also carried out in the Anatomy House.

Here Thomas Bartholin, the Professor of Anatomy, demonstrated the thoracic duct and later the lymphatic vessels in a human being, an achievement that has brought him fame.

In 1662 Thomas Bartholin published A Short Description of the Anatomy House in Copenhagen, which meticulously describes the layout of the Anatomy House alongside the first eighteen years of its history.

This volume presents Bartholin's book for the first time in English, as well as the original Latin text, enabling a broader audience to draw on its various and detailed accounts.

A commentary and an introduction as well as a rich body of illustrations make this edition a valuable resource for historians of medicine.

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Product Details
Museum Tusculanum Press
8763542595 / 9788763542593
Hardback
01/07/2015
Denmark
English
286 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
27 cm
Translated from the Latin.