Show
602 citations
related to Anatomy
Show
602 citations
related to Anatomy as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Sabine Hildebrandt
(2021)
Anatomie im Nationalsozialismus: Die Vergangenheit in der Gegenwart [Anatomy under National Socialism: The past in the present].
Acta Historica Leopoldina
(pp. 11-38).
(/isis/citation/CBB858549925/)
Chapter
Fabio Zampieri
(2021)
The University of Padua Medical School from the Origins to the Early Modern Time: A Historical Overview.
In: Scientiae in the History of Medicine
(pp. 23-68).
(/isis/citation/CBB530598396/)
Chapter
Ragland, Evan R.
(2021)
The Contested Ingenia of Early Modern Anatomy: Continuities and Conflicts in Medical Training at Leiden University, 1592–1678.
In: Ingenuity in the Making: Matter and Technique in Early Modern Europe
(pp. 112-130).
(/isis/citation/CBB006048536/)
Article
Troels Kardel
(2021)
Nicolaus Steno on solutes and solvents in time-related structural changes of muscles, fossils, landscapes and crystals, his Galilean heritage.
Substantia: An International Journal of the History of Chemistry
(pp. 43-57).
(/isis/citation/CBB106475077/)
Book
Fabio Zampieri
(2021)
Giovanni Battista Morgagni: La nascita della medicina moderna.
(/isis/citation/CBB372846544/)
Article
Belle S. Tuten
(2021)
Correcting the unnatural breast: gynecomastia and gender in medieval medicine.
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
(pp. 3-30).
(/isis/citation/CBB904428889/)
Article
Esther Diana
(2021)
Not only a female icon: The breast in symbolism and medicine (from the 14th to the 17th centuries).
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
(pp. 71-120).
(/isis/citation/CBB711184543/)
Book
Maria Conforti
(2021)
Medicina sotto il vulcano: Corpi e salute a Napoli in età moderna.
(/isis/citation/CBB454057018/)
Chapter
Alberto Zanatta
(2021)
The Origin and Development of Medical Museum Heritage in Padua.
In: Scientiae in the History of Medicine
(pp. 121-134).
(/isis/citation/CBB187411892/)
Book
Giovanni Alfonso Borelli; Luigi Ingaliso
(2021)
De motu animalium.
(/isis/citation/CBB899747827/)
Chapter
Cynthia Klestinec
(2021)
The Anatomy Theater: Towards a Performative History.
In: Scientiae in the History of Medicine
(pp. 69-88).
(/isis/citation/CBB804030084/)
Article
Bradford Bouley
(2020)
Digesting Faith: Eating God, Man, and Meat in Seventeenth-Century Rome.
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
(pp. 42-59).
(/isis/citation/CBB553359250/)
Multimedia Object
Hope Longe; Sabine Hildebrandt
(2020)
Sabine Hildebrandt, “The Anatomy of Murder: Ethical Transgressions and Anatomical Science during the Third Reich” (Berghahn, 2017).
New Books Network Podcast.
(/isis/citation/CBB256550674/)
Book
Alexander Wragge-Morley
(2020)
Aesthetic Science: Representing Nature in the Royal Society of London, 1650-1720.
(/isis/citation/CBB757195097/)
Article
Kira L Robison
(2020)
For the Benefit of Students: Memory and Anatomical Learning at Bologna in the Fourteenth to Early Sixteenth Centuries.
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
(pp. 135-150).
(/isis/citation/CBB293878678/)
Book
Laurence Talairach
(2020)
Gothic Remains: Corpses, Terror and Anatomical Culture, 1764–1897.
(/isis/citation/CBB210626437/)
Chapter
Alexander Kästner
(2020)
Reading Moral Conduct and Physical Characteristics: the Classification of Suicide in Early Modern Europe.
In: The Body of Evidence: Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine
(pp. 193-223).
(/isis/citation/CBB055126233/)
Chapter
Francesco Paolo de Ceglia
(2020)
Saving the Phenomenon: Why Corpses Bled in the Presence of Their Murderer in Early Modern Science.
In: The Body of Evidence: Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine
(pp. 23-52).
(/isis/citation/CBB340756814/)
Article
Francesco Paolo De Ceglia
(2020)
The fantastic anatomy of Raimondo de Sangro, Prince of Sansevero.
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
(pp. 657-678).
(/isis/citation/CBB846383340/)
Chapter
Diego Carnevale
(2020)
Visum et Repertum: Medical Doctrine and Criminal Procedures in France and Naples (17th–18th Centuries).
In: The Body of Evidence: Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine
(pp. 245-269).
(/isis/citation/CBB884894838/)
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