Article ID: CBB042369026

Pratica anatomica ospedaliera a Milano al tempo di Leonardo (2020)

unapi

Starting from 1361, Lombardy became the epicenter of an almost uninterrupted series of plague outbreaks. The ducal authorities institutionalized the office of the "physicus epidemiae," a government physician (often a surgeon) entrusted with the task of promptly identifying and reporting suspect deaths caused by highly infectious diseases. It became compulsory to report all cases occurring in the city of deaths or pathologies that were potentially contagious, so as to allow the physician of the Office, commonly known as the "Catelano," to assess the nature of the death or disease. During the 15th century, the reports became more detailed. Information was gained not only from the testimony of relatives, friends and acquaintances, but also from an accurate examination of bodies. Anatomical dissection became a routine practice, although subject to the discretion of the hospital physicians.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB042369026/

Similar Citations

Article Clayton, Martin; (2012)
Medicine: Leonardo's Anatomy Years (/isis/citation/CBB001320448/)

Book Giuseppe Ripamonti; Cesare Repossi; (2021)
La peste di Milano del 1630 (/isis/citation/CBB487340289/)

Article Ginn, Sheryl R.; Lorusso, Lorenzo; (2008)
Brain, Mind, and Body: Interactions with Art in Renaissance Italy (/isis/citation/CBB000831402/)

Article Anna Agostini; (2017)
Il manoscritto di rimedi contro la peste della Biblioteca Fabroniana di Pistoia (/isis/citation/CBB966635251/)

Article Patrizia Cincinnati; (2024)
Ludovico Settala, il protomedico de I promessi sposi. Una nota di storia della medicina (/isis/citation/CBB147335106/)

Chapter Pietro C. Marani; (2010)
Leonardo e le acque in Lombardia. Dal "Primo Libro delle Acque" ai "Diluvi" (/isis/citation/CBB801952762/)

Book Crawshaw, Jane L. Stevens; (2012)
Plague Hospitals: Public Health for the City in Early Modern Venice (/isis/citation/CBB001200915/)

Article Bruno Falconi; Daniela Bellettati; Carlo Cristini; Paolo Maria Galimberti; Lorenzo Lorusso; Alessandro Porro; Antonia Francesca Franchini; (2017)
Gli animali dell'Ospedale e della città: l'esempio della rabbia e dell'Istituto antirabbico dell'Ospedale Maggiore di Milano (/isis/citation/CBB305052307/)

Article Valentina Gazzaniga; Silvia Marinozzi; (2017)
De Carbone, Sive Carbuncolo. Il Carbonchio nella Pubblicistica Italiana dalla Restaurazione all'Unità (/isis/citation/CBB317291966/)

Book Laurenza, Domenico; (2012)
Art and Anatomy in Renaissance Italy: Images from a Scientific Revolution (/isis/citation/CBB001210286/)

Article Jean-Patrice Boudet; Laurence Moulinier-Brogi; (2019)
Miscellanées magico-scientifiques en Italie au Quattrocento: l’exemple du ms. Paris, BnF, it. 1524 (/isis/citation/CBB592436254/)

Article Irma Naso; (2021)
Pandemie tra passato e presente. Assonanze o anticipazioni? (/isis/citation/CBB997024592/)

Article Rosa Piro; (2020)
Sui galenismi nei fogli anatomici di Leonardo da Vinci (/isis/citation/CBB234854138/)

Authors & Contributors
Piro, Rosa
Lorusso, Lorenzo
Salvi, Paola
Cristini, Carlo
Galimberti, Paolo Maria
Pittalis, Edoardo
Journals
Medicina nei Secoli - Arte e Scienza
Nuova Rivista di Storia della Medicina
Atti e Memorie, Rivista di Storia della Farmacia
Archivio Storico Lombardo
Mefisto: Rivista di medicina, filosofia, storia
Micrologus: Nature, Sciences and Medieval Societies
Publishers
Biblioteca dei Leoni
Ashgate Publishing
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Medicine
Public health
Epidemics
Plague
Human anatomy
Anatomy
People
Leonardo da Vinci
Ludovico Settala
Galen
Time Periods
Renaissance
15th century
16th century
17th century
Medieval
Early modern
Places
Italy
Milan (Italy)
Spain
Europe
Venice (Italy)
Ottoman Empire
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment