Old-Time Makers of Medicine / The Story of The Students And Teachers of the Sciences Related to Medicine During the Middle Ages
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About This Book
A wide-ranging survey of medical thought and practice during the medieval period, it traces how classical, Jewish, and Arabic traditions were preserved, adapted, and taught in centers such as Salerno and Bologna. The narrative profiles prominent physicians, surgeons, and teachers — including Maimonides, Constantine Africanus, Mondino, and Guy de Chauliac — and examines topics from anatomy, surgery, and dentistry to the roles of women practitioners, alchemical experimentation leading toward chemistry, and early laboratory methods. The work also considers institutional contexts like medieval universities and popular scientific dissemination, emphasizing patterns of transmission, continuity, and occasional loss that shaped later medical developments.
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