The earliest classical writer on medical subjects is Hippocrates, who was born in 460 B. C. and who practised in Athens and other parts of Greece. The 'Hippocratic Collection' is well known to consist of works which are not all by Hippocrates himself; but as the pseudo-Hippocratic works all belong to the classical period they are all admissible as evidence for our purpose, and for the sake of brevity I shall throughout refer to them as if all were by Hippocrates. Many interesting instruments are named in the comparatively ...
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The earliest classical writer on medical subjects is Hippocrates, who was born in 460 B. C. and who practised in Athens and other parts of Greece. The 'Hippocratic Collection' is well known to consist of works which are not all by Hippocrates himself; but as the pseudo-Hippocratic works all belong to the classical period they are all admissible as evidence for our purpose, and for the sake of brevity I shall throughout refer to them as if all were by Hippocrates. Many interesting instruments are named in the comparatively small collection of treatises which make up the admittedly genuine list of Hippocratic works, but, taking these along with the pseudo-Hippocratic works, the number of instruments named in the whole collection is surprisingly large, comprising as it does trephines, bone drills, probes, needles, tooth forceps, uvula forceps, bone elevators, uterine sounds, graduated dilators, cranioclasts, and others. After Hippocrates there is a break in the continuity of the literature, and for some hundreds of years Greek medicine is represented almost entirely by the Alexandrian Schools. The first printed edition of the Hippocratic works was a Latin translation printed at Rome in 1525, followed by the Aldine edition of the Greek text printed at Venice in the following year. Other editions are the edition of F???es (1595), Van der Linden (1665), K???hn (Leipzig, 1821). Later editions are the text with a French translation by Littr??? (10 vols., 1849-61), a scholarly edition by Ermerins with a Latin rendering (1859-64), and an excellent translation of the genuine works of Hippocrates by the world-famous Dr. Adams of Banchory (Sydenham Soc. Trans., 1849). The best edition, however, is the edition of Kuehlewein, begun in 1894 and at present in course of publication by Teubner, Leipzig. The later volumes have not yet appeared. For the portion of the text which is not contained in the first two volumes of Kuehlewein I have relied on the edition of K???hn for most of the readings, although occasionally those of Van der Linden or F???es are to be preferred. The references given are to the volumes and pages of K???hn's edition, but in this edition indications are given of the corresponding localities in the other editions so that cross-references to these can easily be made. There seems to be a different arrangement in different editions of F???es, for Liddell and Scott say the references in their Lexicon are to the pages in F???es but they do not correspond in any way to the pagination of the edition before me (Frankfort, 1595).
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Add this copy of Surgical Instruments in Greek and Roman Times to cart. $206.00, new condition, Sold by R Joseph Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from battle ground, WA, UNITED STATES, published 1991 by ARE.
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Seller's Description:
New. Excellent New Book. The best collection of information from both literary sources and archeological monuments on the types of ancient surgical instruments used by the physicians of the Greco-Roman world. Fifty-four plates illustrate the surgical instruments discussed in this valuable reference work. 187pp + 54pll.