Page:The growth of medicine from the earliest times to about 1800.djvu/19

 Chapter XXVII. The Founders of Human Anatomy and Physiology     340

Chapter XXVIII. Further Details Concerning the Advance in Our Knowledge of Anatomy.—Dissecting Made a Part of the Regular Training of a Medical Student.—Iatrochemists and Iatrophysicists.—The Employment of Latin in Lecturing and Writing on Medical Topics     355

Chapter XXIX. The Contributions Made by Different Men during the Renaissance, and More particularly by William Harvey of England, to Our Knowledge of the Circulation of the Blood, Lymph and Chyle     371

Chapter XXX. Advances Made in Internal Medicine and in the Collateral Branches of Botany, Pharmacology, Chemistry and Pathological Anatomy     387

Chapter XXXI. Chemistry and Experimental Pharmacology     398

Chapter XXXII. Some of the Leaders in Medicine in Italy, France and England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries     411

Chapter XXXIII. The Three Leading Physicians of Germany during the Latter Half of the Seventeenth Century: Franz de le Boë Sylvius, Friedrich Hoffmann and Georg Ernst Stahl     426

Chapter XXXIV. Hermann Boerhaave of Leyden, Holland, one of the Most Distinguished Physicians of the Seventeenth Century     438

Chapter XXXV. General Remarks on the Development of Surgery in Europe during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries     446

Chapter XXXVI. Surgery in Germany and Switzerland during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries     454

Chapter XXXVII. The Development of Surgery in Italy during the Renaissance     472

Chapter XXXVIII. The Development of Surgery in Spain and Portugal during the Renaissance     484