Browse Items (4 total)

http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/file_upload/0002508_ref.jpg
Although notable as one of the first incunables acquired by the Boston Medical Library, this first edition of the Fasciculus medicinae is also a cornerstone in the history of medicine, as it contains the first detailed anatomical illustrations ever…

http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/file_upload/0002793_dref.jpg
Bernard de Gordon taught in the medical faculty at Montpellier, which was a refuge for Jewish students from Spain. The Lilium Medicinae, written in 1303 and first printed in Naples in 1480, must have been well-known and well-used, as there were 7…

http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/file_upload/SAL0106.jpg
An excellent example of the use of medical metaphor for political comment, this print depicts one of Gillray's favorite targets, Henry Addington, Prime Minister 1801-1804, bleeding John Bull (Great Britain). Addington, the son of a physician, was…

http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/file_upload/Cohn.Centrifuges_v4.jpg
After World War II, Harvard researcher Edwin Joseph Cohn (1892-1953) devised a small centrifuge in which a donor's blood could be quickly separated into its components and stored more efficiently. The centrifugal force employed divides the heavier…
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