Transcript 关于〈医学导论〉这门课
医学史简论(5)
A Brief History of Medicine
Yu Hai
Zhejiang University School of Medicine
Origin of Medicine
Egypt
Babylon
India
China
Western Medicine
Greece
Rome
Medieval
Arabic medicine
Renaissance
Pre-modern medicine
Modern medicine
TCM
Medicine in Byzantine Empire ( 400 AD to 1453 AD )
293AD Diocletian divided Rome Empire into Eastern and Western:
476AD fall of Western Empire
395 AD Constantine I moved the capital to Byzantine and changed the
name to Constantinople;1453AD Constantinople was conquered by
Ottoman Empire,changed Constantinople to Istanbul
Byzantine Medicine
Inherited from ancient Greek and Roman
medicine, influenced on Islamic
medicine and the Western rebirth of
Medicine during the Renaissance.
Constantinople became the center of
medicine in middle age.
The first hospital was built by Basil of
Caesarea ( bishop of Caesarea)in the
late 4th century , there was a dedicated
hierarchy including the Chief Physician,
professional nurses and the orderlies .
Established medical schools
Famous doctors and compilation of text
books:Paul (Medical Compendium in
Seven Books), Oribasius (Synagoga
Medicae ),Aetius (Tetrabiblos ),
Alexander
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学
Arab-Islamic Medicine
The rising of Islam and Islamic Empire in 7th centure
Prophet Muhammad
Abu al-Qasim Muhammad
Ibn Abd Allah Ibn Abd alMuttalib Ibn Hashim
570Mecca-632Medina
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学
Arab-Islamic Medicine
Islamic medicine was a genre of medical writing
that was influenced by several different
medical systems, including the
traditional Arabian medicine of Muhammad‘s
time, ancient Hellenistic medicine such
as Unani, ancient Indian medicine such
as Ayurveda, and the ancient Iranian medicine .
The works of ancient Greek and
Roman physicians Hippocrates and Galen had a
lasting impact on Islamic medicine
The first Muslim physician is believed to have been the
prophet Muhammad himself, as a significant number
of hadiths concerning medicine are attributed to him:
"There is no disease that Allah has created, except that He also
has created its treatment.
"Make use of medical treatment, for Allah has not made a
disease without appointing a remedy for it, with the exception
of one disease, namely old age."
"Allah has sent down both the disease and the cure, and He has
appointed a cure for every disease, so treat yourselves
medically."
"The one who sent down the disease sent down the remedy."
"For every disease, Allah has given a cure."
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Graeco-Arabic (Hundred
Years) Translation
Movement
In Abbasid Caliphate (7501258) particularly in Caliph
Al-Mamun (813-833) period
Islam scholars translated
classical Greek, Roman text
of philosophy, science,
literature as well as
medicine into Arabic,
therefore large amount of
classical work preserved.
Arab-Islamic Medicine
炼金术 Alkimiya
(alchemy)
Promoted the
development of chemistry
•Instrument of chemistry
•chemicals
•Chemical methods
(distillation, crystallization,
sublimation, calcination)
Kim-金 Chinese alkimiya for
elixir of life (immortality)
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学
Arab-Islamic Medicine
Pharmacy
1400+ drugs
(camphor, senna,
rhubarb, musk, nutmeg,
alum, ambergris)
Chemical drugs
Forms of drugs
阿拉伯药房 Arabic Pharmacy
Cataract Couching
Couching, a method
of traditional
cataract (lens
opacity)treatment,
it typically involves
the use of a sharp or
blunt instrument to
dislocate the
cataract lens and
push it back into the
posterior chamber
of the eye.
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学 Arab-Islamic Medicine
Cataract couching Indian (Sushuruta)-Greek-Arabic-China
(金针拨障术, 唐.王焘)
Arabic
Greek
Lens suspensory ligament vitreous body -aphakia
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学 Arab-Islamic Medicine
Avicenna
(980-1037),
Full name: Hussain ibn Abdullah
ibn Hassan ibn Ali ibn Sina (Ali AlHusain ben Abdalah Ibn sina).
Born in Afshana, near Bukhara
(Uzbekistan), in a Persian family
Avicenna’s tomb in Hamadan, Iran
阿拉伯医学 Arabic-Islamic
Medicine
Avicenna: Canon of Medicine
was a standard medical text at
many medieval universities, and
used as a text-book in the
Universities of Montpellier and
Louvain as late as 1650.
Doctor of doctors
阿拉伯-伊斯兰医学
Arab-Islamic Medicine
文艺复兴 Renaissance
The Renaissance of European
civilization (rebirth)
A period between Middle Ages
and the Modern era in 1417th century beginning in
Florence Italy in the
late Middle Ages and later
spreading to the rest
of Europe. A cultural
movement of literature,
philosophy, art, science and
religion resulted in social and
political revolution.
Florence 翡冷翠 Firenze
文艺复兴
Renaissance:background
The fall of Byzantine Empire
led to the exodus of Greek
scholars to Italy and brought
with them texts and
knowledge of the
classical Greek civilization
which had been lost for
centuries in the West,
people rediscovered the
classical ideas that have
been forgotten by Western
civilization.
Fall of Constantinople
Renaissance:Background
十字军东征 Crusades (1096-1291) 9 times
Science and knowledge was brought back from the
Middle East by crusaders in the 13th century
Renaissance:background
Marco Polo in China
Columbus
1492
Renaissance:background
1346-1353 Outbreak of black death
(plagues) the death toll reached to
25 millions (1/3 of European
population)
1348 Pope Clement VI called the
followers to Rome, 1.2 million
pilgrims died only 1/10 survived.
Renaissance:background
科学
Science
Mathematics and scientific method
great contributions in the fields of
astronomy,
physics, biology and
.
anatomy
Petrarch 1304-1374
人文主义 Humanism
Galileo Galilei
(1564 –1642)[
Human interests, needs, values,
worth, and dignity are taken to be of
primary importance, as in moral
judgments.
文艺复兴:Renaissance:arts
Italian polymath,
being a
scientist,
mathematician,
engineer,
inventor, painter,
sculptor,
architect,
botanist,
musician and
writer and also a
anatomist.
达芬奇
1452-1519
Leonardo da Vinci
Vitruvian (Roman architect) man
(Proportion of man) 1487
Leonardo da Vinci:
Monalisa
Last supper
文艺复兴:Renaissance:arts
Buonarroti Michelangelo
1475-1564
The creation (Sistine)
Michelangelo
David
The Pieta
文艺复兴:Renaissance:arts
Jesus & Madonna
Raphael
1483-1520
Virgin and Child
The School of Athens
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Early
Renaissance
Greece and Rome
(Galen)
中世纪
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Middle Ages
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Arabic
Early Renaissance period
阿
拉
伯
女
性
解
剖
图
文
艺
复
兴
早
期
解
剖
图
(
显
示
血
管
)
中国古代的解剖学
China, Song Dynasty
Physician Yang Jie(1102—
1106)did dissection on
body of executed prisoner
and asked painter to draw
the antomy
内景图Ming
Dynasty
(1368-1644)
脏腑明堂图
Zangfumingtangtu
(1906)
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Contribution of Da
Vinci on anatomy
•Dissected at least 30
human corpses
•Studied the movement
of muscle
•Challenged Galen’s
mistakes
•750 drawings(150
left)
Da Vinci
达芬奇解剖图
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Andreas Vesalius
Studied at University of Paris
and University of Leuven
Professor of Surgery and
Anatomy in Padua University,
the founder of modern
human anatomy.
1543 Published De humani
corporis fabrica (On the
Workings of the Human
Body).
Andreas Vesalius
维萨里 1514-1564
Andreas Vesalius
Performed his own
dissections rather than
reading aloud while a
demonstrator did the
dissection, using drawings
in teaching anatomy
Criticized Galen for his
methods in studying
anatomy
Anatomic Diagrams
Illustrated by Johann Stephen von
Calcar (student of Tiziano Vecellio)
Andreas Vesalius:
Anatomic Diagrams
Base of the brain, showing
optic chiasma, cerebellum,
olfactory bulb, etc
Vesalius's Fabrica contained many intricately detailed
drawings of human dissections, often in allegorical poses.
Renaissance medicine:Anatomy
Spanish theologian, physician, cartographer
and humanist. First to describe the function
of pulmonary circulation, but condemned by
Catholics and Protestants alike, he was burnt
at the stake as a heretic by order of the
Protestant Geneva governing council.
Michael Servetus
1511-1553
文艺复兴和医学:解剖学的发展
William Harvey
1578-1657
Harvey announced his
discovery of the circulatory
system in 1616 and in 1628
published his work Exercitatio
Anatomica de Motu Cordis et
Sanguinis in Animalibus (An
Anatomical Exercise on the
Motion of the Heart and Blood
in Animals), and described
the pulmonary circulation and
systemic circulation
With careful observation and
quantitative experiments
challenged Galen’s theory on
the artery and vein
显微解剖学Microscopic Anatomy
Early 17th century English man Digges and Dutch
spectacle maker Zaccharias and Hans Janssen invented
first microscopy
Two convex lenses
显微解剖学的发展Microscopic Anatomy
1610 Galileo worked our the
priciples of lenses and made a
better instrument with focusing
device enlarging for 70 times
显微解剖学的发展
1694
马尔比基 1628-
Marcello Malpighi
Microscopic Anatomy
Observed biological tissues
with microscope as the
pioneer of histology and
embryology
显微解剖学的发展Microscopic Anatomy
The discovery of capillary, microscopic structure
of lung and kidney
Malpighian alveoli
Capillaries in frog
mesentery
Malpighian Tubules
显微解剖学的发展Microscopic Anatomy
虎克
1635-1702
Robert Hooke
显微解剖学的发展Microscopic Anatomy
Discovery of compound
eyes in insects
The discovery of cell and its
naming (cork)
显微解剖学的发展Microscopic Anatomy
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
1632-1723
A Dutch cloth merchant
used new method for
grinding and polishing
tiny lenses of great
curvature which gave
magnifications up to 270
diameters
显微解剖学的发展
Microscopic Anatomy
Leeuwenhoek was first to see and
describe bacteria as animalcules (tiny
animals), became the father of
microbiology, he was also first to record
microscopic observations of muscle fibers,
spermatozoa, and blood flow in capillaries.
Thanks
The End