European
In
early medieval Europe, religious groups established hospitals
and infirmaries in monasteries and later developed charitable
institutions designed to care for the victims of vast epidemics
of bubonic plague, leprosy, smallpox, and other diseases that
swept Europe during the Middle Ages. The Benedictines were
especially active in this work, collecting and studying ancient
medical texts in their library at Monte Cassino near Salerno,
Italy. St. Benedict of Nursia, the founder of the order, obligated
its members to study the sciences, especially medicine. The
abbot of Monte Cassino, Bertharius, was himself a famous physician.
During
the 9th and 10th centuries Salerno became Europe's center
for medical care and education and was the site of the first
Western school of medicine. By the 12th century other medical
schools were established at the universities of Bologna and
Padua in Italy, the University of Paris in France, and Oxford
University in England.
In
the 13th century, medical licensure by examination was endorsed
and strict measures were instituted for the control of public
hygiene. Representative scientists of this period include
the German scholastic St. Albertus Magnus, who engaged in
biological research, and the English philosopher Roger Bacon,
who undertook research in optics and refraction and was the
first scholar to suggest that medicine should rely on remedies
provided by chemistry. Bacon, often regarded as an original
thinker and pioneer in experimental science, was strongly
influenced by the authority of Greek and Arabic medicine.
The
period of the Renaissance, which began at the end of the 14th
century and lasted for about 200 years, was one of the most
revolutionary and stimulating in the history of mankind. Invention
of printing and gunpowder, discovery of America, the new cosmology
of Copernicus, the Reformation, the great voyages of discovery-all
these new forces were working to free science and medicine
from the shackles of medieval stagnation. The fall of Constantinople
in 1453 scattered the Greek scholars, with their precious
manuscripts, all over Europe.
The
revival of learning in Western civilizations brought great
advances in human anatomy. Some resulted from the work of
artists, including Italian Leonardo da Vinci, who dissected
human corpses to portray muscles and other structures more
accurately. Andreas Vesalius, a Belgian anatomist, clearly
demonstrated hundreds of anatomical errors introduced by Galen
centuries earlier. Gabriel Falliopius discovered the uterine
tubes named after him and diagnosed ear diseases with an ear
speculum. He described in detail the muscles of the eye, tear
ducts, and fallopian tubes. Italian physician Girolamo Fracastoro
recognized that infectious diseases are spread by invisible
so-called seeds that can reproduce themselves. He founded
modern epidemiology, the study of how diseases spread. The
term syphilis, applied to the virulent disease then devastating
Europe, was derived from his famous poem, "Syphilis sive
Morbus Gallicus" (Syphilis or Disease of Gauls, 1530).
Ambroise Paré introduced new surgical techniques and
helped to found modern surgery.
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