Vesalius, Andreas

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VESALIUS, ANDREAS

(b. Brussels, Belgium, 31 December 1514; d. Zákinthos, Greece, 15 October 1564), medicine.

The date of Vesalius’ birth is derived from a horoscope cast by the Milanese physician Girolamo Cardano, from which it may also be determined that he was born at a quarter to six in the morning. His father, also named Andreas, was an apothecary of the Emperor Charles V and the illegitimate son of Everard van Wesele or Vesalius and as such, was humble member of a family already distinguished for several generations in medical circles. The maiden name of Vesalius’ mother was Isabel Crabbe, and this resemblance to the name of the English poet has given rise to the legend that she was an Englishwoman. The name Crabbe is in fact common in Brabant.

The young Vesalius received his elementary education in Brussels and matriculated at the University of Louvain in February 1530 to pursue the arts course, the necessary prerequisite for entrance into a professional school. It is not known when he decided to study medicine, but such decision could have been related to the emperor’s legitimization of the young man’s father in 1531, which may have encouraged him to carry on his family’s traditional profession.

Since at this time the medical school of Louvain had little repute, Vesalius chose to carry on his medical studies at the more illustrious faculty of the University of Paris, matriculating there probably in September 1533, where he studied with Guinter of Andernach, Jacobus sylvius (Jacques Dubois), and Jean Ferne. Guinter, who in his Institutions anatomicae (1536) spoke very favorably of his student, and Sylvius, an arch-Galenist and later an enemy of Vesalius, each in his own way directed the young man toward anatomical research. Since they were both supporters of the Galenic tradition, it was natural that their student, although he acquired skill in the technique of dissection, remained under the influence of Galenic concepts of anatomy.

The war between France and the Holy Roman Empire compelled Vesalius to leave Paris in 1536. He returned to Louvain, where, with the friendly support of the burgomaster, he was able to reintroduce anatomical dissection, which had not been part of the medical curriculum for many years, and in 1537 he received the degree of bachelor of medicine. While completing his studies he produced his Paraphrasis in nonum librum Rhazae ad Regem Almansorem (Louvain, 1537), in which he compared Muslim and Galenic therapy-to the disadvantage of the former-but sought to preserve the reputation of Rhazes and to reconcile him with the Greeks. A youthful work, of no significance except as an indication of Vesalius’ continued allegiance to Galen, it was nevertheless important enough to its author for him to reprint it in Basel later in the year, on his way to Italy.

In the autumn of 1537 Vesalius enrolled in the medical school of the University of Padua, then the most famous in Europe, where, after two days of examinations, he received the degree of doctor of medicine magna cum laude on 5 December 1537 and on the following day accepted appointment as explicator chirurgiae with the responsibility of lecturing on surgery and anatomy. Immediately thereafter he gave the required annual anatomical lectures and demonstrations, which although Galenic in character were unusual because, contrary to custom, Vesalius himself performed the dissections rather than consigning that task to a surgeon. In addition, he produced four large anatomical charts representing the portal, caval, arterial, and nervous systems, based chiefly on this dissection and intended as a reference work and memory aid for his students when the cadaver was no longer available. These figures were distinctly novel both in their size, which permitted deceptively naturalistic although primarily Galenic portrayals of even the smaller structures, and in their detailed identification of the parts through an elaborately indexed anatomical terminology of Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Hebrew. The theft and subsequent publication of the drawing of the nervous system and the danger of plagiarism of the others led Vesalius to publish the thee remaining drawings, together with three views of the skeleton by the Dutch artist Jan Stephen of Calcar, a student in Titian’s studio. Although without a general title, they are usually referred to as Tabulae anatomicae sex (Venice, 1538).

In the same year Vesalius produced a dissection manual for his students, Institutiones anatomicae secundum Galeni sententiam…per loannem Guinterium Andernachum…ab Abdrea Vesalio…auctiores et emendatiores redditae (Venice, 1538). As the title indicates, this was a revised and augmented edition of the Galenically oriented dissection manual of his former teacher in Paris, Guinter of Andernach. The revisions display a concern with the minutiae of dissection technique, and the augmentations offer several independent anatomical judgments, such as the briefly expressed but clearly anti-Galenic observation that the cardiac systole is synchronous with the arterial pulse.

Also in 1538 Vesalius visited Matteo Corti, professor of medicine in Bologna, and discussed the problems of therapy by venesection. Differences of opinion between the two men seem to have been the impulse behind Vesalius’ next book, Epistola docens venam axillarem dextri cubiti in dolore laterali secundam (Basel, 1539), written in support of the revived classical procedure first advocated in a posthumous publication (1525) of the Parisian physician Pierre Brissot. In this procedure blood was drawn from a site near the location of the ailment, in contrast to the Muslim and medieval practice of drawing blood from a distant part of the body. As the title of his book indicates, Vesalius sought to locate the precise site for venesection in pleurisy within the framework of the classical method. The real significance of the book lay in Vesalius’ attempt to support his arguments by the location and continuity of the venous system rather than by an appeal to earlier authority. Despite his own still faulty knowledge, his method may be called scientific in relation to that of others; certainly it was nontraditional and required that his opponents resort to the same method if they wished to reply effectively. With this novel approach to the problem of venesection Vesalius posed the then striking hypothesis that anatomical dissection might be used to test speculation. Here too he declared clearly, on the basis of vivisection, that cardiac systole was synchronous with arterial expansion and for the first time mentioned his initial efforts in the preparation of the anatomical monograph that was ultimately to take shape as De humani corporis fabrica.

These activities and the novelty of Vesalius’ teaching were greatly appreciated by both the teachers and students of the university. Indeed, the official document by which the young anatomist was reappointed in 1539 to the medical faculty, with a considerable increase in salary, declared that “he has aroused very great admiration in all the students.” Although the opportunities for dissection were limited by the small number of cadavers available, by 1538, from his lecturing on Galen and his own dissecting, Vesalius began to realize that there were contradictions between Galen’s texts and his own observations in the human body.

In 1539 his supply of dissection material became much greater when Marcantonio Contarini, judge of the Paduan criminal court, became interested in Vesalius’ investigations and made the bodies of executed criminals available to him—occasionally delaying executions to suit the convenience of the young anatomist. For the first time Vesalius had sufficient human material to make and to repeat detailed and comparative dissections. As a result, he became increasingly convinced that Galen’s description of human anatomy was basically an account of the anatomy of animals in general and was often erroneous insofar as the human body was concerned. During the winter of 1539 he was sufficiently sure of his position to challenge the validity of Galenic anatomy in Padua and shortly thereafter to repeat the challenge in Bologna.

Vesalius went to Bologna in January 1540, at the invitation of the medical students of that city, to present a series of anatomical demonstrations, in the course of which he boldly declared that human anatomy could be learned only from the dissection and observation of the human body. As proof of the nonhuman source of Galen’s anatomy he articulated ape and human skeletons and demonstrated that Galen’s description of the bones agreed only with the former.

On his return to Padua, Vesalius began the composition of the Fabrica in its final form. For the next two years, until the summer of 1542, he concentrated his efforts on this huge work, sparing no expenditure of energy or money. He hired the best draftsmen he could find to make the illustrations and the finest Venetian block cutters to reproduce them. To print the book he chose Joannes Oporinus of Basel. In the summer of 1542 Vesalius left Padua for Basel to oversee the printing of his book, and the following May he dissected the body of an executed malefactor and articulated the skeleton, which is still preserved in the University of Basel’s anatomical institute.

With the publication of De humani corporis fabrica (Basel, 1543)—in August rather than in June as given in the colophon—and of its Epitome (Basel, 1543; German translation by Albanus Torinus, Basel, 1543), Vesalius, with youthful impetuosity, decided to relinquish his anatomical studies for the practice of medicine. Since there was a long tradition of imperial service in his family, he applied to the Emperor Charles V and received an appointment as physician to the imperial household. It was an unfortunate decision since much of his time was henceforth devoted to the complaints of the gluttonous emperor and, as Vesalius wrote, “to the Gallic disease, gastrointestinal disorders, and chronic ailments, which are the usual complaints of my patients.” The imperial service once entered could not be abandoned; Vesalius remained the emperor’s physician until the latter’s abdication, thirteen years later.

Despite his renunciation of anatomical studies, it was inevitable that Vesalius would soon return to his first interest. In January 1544 he traveled to Pisa to give a series of demonstrations at the invitation of Cosimo I, grand duke of Tuscany, who sought unsuccessfully to retain his services. Thereafter, while acting as a military surgeon in the course of the emperor’s wars, Vesalius never failed to visit any nearby medical school, to participate in postmortem examinations, or to take advantage of any opportunities for anatomical research. In 1546, during an extended visit to Regensburg, he wrote a long letter partly concerned with the discovery and therapeutic use of the chinaroot (Chinae radix) in the treatment of syphilis and partly to justify his anatomically heretical activities against the attack of the Galenic anatomists of Paris, most notably those of his former teacher Sylvius. It was published under the title Epistola rationem modumque propinandi radicis chynae decocti pertractans (Basel, 1546).

During his service with the imperial army Vesalius was able to apply his unrivaled anatomical knowledge to surgery. He learned the emollient treatment of gunshot wounds from the Italian surgeon Bartolomeo Maggi; and although his surgery seems to have been burdened at first by an academic quality not required or even desirable on the battlefield, he quickly learned existing surgical techniques and went on to develop others. His most notable contribution was the introduction, as early as 1547, of surgically induced drainage of empyema, and he became so proficient in this procedure that he was sufficiently confident of the outcome to recommend it to other surgeons. His account of this operation, written as a letter (1562) to Giovanni Filippo Ingrassia of Sicily, was an outstanding contribution to the surgical literature. His reputation as a surgeon became so great that in 1559, when Henry II of France received what was to be a fatal head wound in a tournament. Vesalius was summoned from Brussels and placed in charge of the patient, despite the presence of the distinguished French surgeon Ambroise Paré. Vesalius wrote the report of the case after its termination.

The qualities of mind that had been responsible for the Fabrica brought Vesalius the reputation of being one of the great physicians of his age; his opinion was widely sought in grave medical problems. There are a number of contemporary references to him as “that noble physician” and “the best physician in the world.” An instance of what he considered the proper relation of anatomy to medicine was his remarkable diagnosis and correct prognosis in 1555 of an internal aneurysm in a living patient.

As his experience became greater and as he realized the need for correcting errors of fact and faults of composition in the Fabrica, Vesalius gave more thought to a new edition. It is not known when an agreement was reached with the publisher Oporinus for the costly enterprise, but it was at some time after 1547; and it seems most likely that Vesalius wrote the revised text during an extended sojourn with the emperor in Augsburg between August 1550 and October 1551. However, it was only after a long delay that the revised edition was published in Basel in August 1555.

With the abdication of Charles V in 1555, Vesalius for unknown reasons took service with his son Philip II of Spain as physician to the Netherlanders at the Spanish court and, from time to time, to the king himself. He remained in Spain from 1559 until the year of his death.

At the close of 1561 Vesalius completed a long reply to the Observationes anatomicae (1561) of Gabriele Falloppio, a respectful criticism of certain aspects of the Fabrica, which had been sent to him by the author during the preceding summer. Vesalius’ reply, later published under the title of Anatomicarum Gabrielis Falloppii observationum examen (Venice, 1564), is partly a defense against Falloppio’s criticisms and partly an acceptance of them. In addition, it stated Vesalius’ desire to return to his former chair of anatomy at Padua. During the spring of 1562, on the command of Philip II, Vesalius joined the physicians involved in the care and treatment of Don Carlos, the king’s son and heir, who, as the result of a fall, had received a severe injury to his head and was for long in grave danger.

In 1564 Vesalius left Spain for a trip to the Holy Land. Contrary to various legends, the journey appears to have been undertaken with the friendly approbation of the king, although it is not entirely clear whether Vesalius intended to return to Spain. After a visit to Venice—where he apparently was invited to accept his former chair at padua in succession to Falloppio, who had died—he set sail in March for the Holy Land by way of Cyprus. It is not known precisely when the return voyage was begun, but in any event his ship was delayed by a violent storm. After much hardship it finally reached the island of Zákinthos in October, where Vesalius died and was buried in an unidentified site.

Vesalius produced only one book of great importance, De humani corporis fabrica (1543), to which may be added several complementary works, the Epitome (1543), Epistola rationem modumque propinandi radicis chynae (1546), the revised edition of the Fabrica (1555), and the Examen (1564).

Several motives underlay the composition and publication of the Fabrica. According to Vesalius medicine was properly composed of three parts; drugs, diet, and “the use of the hands,” by which last he referred to surgical practice and especially to its necessary preliminary, a knowledge of human anatomy that could be acquired only by dissecting human bodies with one’s own hands. Through disdain of anatomy, the most fundamental aspect of medicine, or, as Vesalius phrased it, by refusal to lay their hands on the patient’s body, physicians betray their profession and are physicians only in part.

Vesalius hoped that by his example in Padua and especially by his verbal and pictorial presentation in the Fabrica he might persuade the medical world to appreciate anatomy as fundamental to all other aspects of medicine and that, through the application of his principles of investigation, a genuine knowledge of human anatomy would be achieved by others, in contrast to the more restricted traditional outlook and the uncritical acceptance of Galenic anatomy. The very word “fabrica” could be interpreted as referring not only to the structure of the body but to the basic structure or foundation of the medical art as well. Thus, Vesalius directed his work toward the established physician, whom he hoped to attract to the study of anatomy as a major but neglected aspect of a true medicine and, no less important, toward those members of the medical profession who were concerned with the teaching of anatomy and might be induced to forsake their long-accepted traditional methods for those proposed by Vesalius. As anatomy was then taught, he wrote, “there is very little offered to the [students] that could not better be taught by a butcher in his shop.”

The Fabrica was also written to demonstrate the fallacious character of Galenic anatomy and all that it implied. Since Galen’s anatomy was based upon the dissection and observation of animals, it was worthless as an explanation of the human structure; and since previous anatomical texts were essentially Galenic, they likewise were worthless and ought to be disregarded. Human anatomy was to be learned only by dissection and investigation of the human body, the true source of such knowledge. Nevertheless it was desirable that human dissection be accompanied by a parallel dissection of the bodies of other animals in order to show the differences in structure and hence the source of Galen’s errors. “Physicians ought to make use not only of the bones of man but, for the sake of Galen of those of the ape and dog.” It was because of Vesalius that Padua became the first great center of comparative as well as of human anatomical studies, a dual interest that continued to develop under his successors Falloppio, Fabrici, and Casserio.

According to Vesalius, the student or physician ought to carry on these activities himself and should personally dissect the human body. The professor or teacher must also descend from his cathedra, dismiss the surgeon who had formerly performed the actual anatomy, and undertake his own dissecting. Moreover, it was not sufficient to base judgments upon a single dissection: the same dissection should be repeated upon several bodies until the dissector could be certain that his observations did not represent structural anomaly. Even the reader of the Fabrica must not be content to accept Vesalius’ descriptions without question but ought to test them by his own dissections and observations. For this purpose the descriptive chapters of the Fabrica are frequently followed by directions for making one’s own dissection of the part described so as to arrive at an independent conclusion.

Vesalius regarded the Fabrica as the gospel of a new approach to human anatomical studies and a new method of anatomical investigation. In Padua both the gospel and its explications were presented directly by the author. For those elsewhere it was presented through the Fabrica with its long and complete descriptions, its illustrative and diagrammatic guides to aid recognition of details and to supplement the reader’s possible shortage of dissection specimens, and even its indirect encouragement of body snatching if necessary. The work reflects fully Vesalius’ method of instruction from about the end of 1539 through 1542 and represents some of it pictorially on the title page.

The presentation of a new anatomy and anatomical method raised several problems, of which the first was that of terminology. As in the Tabulae anatomicae (1538), Vesalius continued to use terms from several languages but stressed the Greek form wherever possible. If this was not enough for clarity, an extensive description was given to localize the part with reference to other parts, and illustrations of the particular organ or structure were provided. Additionally, as a mnemonic device and for increased comprehension, anatomical structures were related to common objects, the radius, for example, being compared to the weaver’s shuttle and the trapezius muscle to the cowl of the Benedictine monks. Some of Vesalius’ terms are still in use, so that this aspect of his pedagogy plays the same role today as it did in the sixteenth century. Thus the names of two of the auditory ossicles, the incus and malleus, are derived from vesalius’ description of them as “that one somewhat resembling the shape of an anvil [incus]” and “that one resembling a hammer [malleus].” The valve of the left atrioventricular orifice, the mitral valve, “you may aptly compare to a bishop’s miter.”

Vesalius’ greatest contribution to the elucidation of anatomy is to be found in the illustrations to the Fabrica. With the exception of those few diagrammatic illustrations that are known to have been drawn by him there is no positive identification of individual draftsmen. The soundest theory is that they were students from Titian’s studio in Venice. Possibly among them was Jan Stephen of Calcar, who drew the three figures of the skeleton for the published version of Vesalius’ anatomical plates of 1538; but the three skeletons of the Fabrica are so greatly superior to those of the earlier work that it seems unlikely that Calcar was responsible for them.

The anatomical detail of the illustrations and their numbered and lettered explanatory legends make it clear that the drawings were made under the supervision of Vesalius for the specific purpose of clarification of a particular portion of the text. Not only is the quality of draftsmanship and precision of detail immensely superior to that of earlier books but the marginal references to the illustrations, which in some instances relate a textual description to several illustrations located in different parts of the work, are also entirely without precedent. For the first time the pedagogic purpose of illustrations was achieved—so well that unfortunately attention has more recently been centered upon the illustrations to the exclusion of the text, thereby nullifying Vesalius’ purpose and even damaging his reputation. He has, for example, been criticized for the exaggerated upward extension of the rectus abdominis muscle as it appears in the fifth “muscle man,” although the legend accompanying the illustration explains this as having been done deliberately to represent an error of Galenic anatomy. Several such seeming errors are in fact deliberate distortions serving pedagogical purposes; they are not appreciated, however, unless text and illustrations are studied together.

In addition to the title page the most noteworthy illustrations in the Fabrica are the three celebrated skeletal figures and the series of “muscle men” which through their postures were given a dynamic quality that was intentional and specifically referred to by Vesalius. The “muscle men,” shown from the front, side, and back, and displaying in sequence from the surface downward the underlying layers of muscle, were a novelty, although crudely foreshadowed by the series of figures in Berengario da Carpi’s Commentaria (1521); the latter, however, were wholly lacking the elegance and detail to be found in the Vesalian figures.

Owing to the larger amount of dissection material available to him, Vesalius was not compelled to follow the traditional pattern of dissection and description originally established by Mondino (1316). Consequently, book I of the Fabrica opens with a description of the bones. This arrangement was desirable since according to Vesalius the bones are the foundation of the body, the structure to which everything else must be related; and in his anatomical demonstrations he was accustomed to sketch the position of the bones on the surface of the body with charcoal in order to orient the students. The fundamental significance of the bones was further indicated by his reference to the femur, for example, as either the bone itself or the entire leg of which the bone was the basic structure. Moreover, the bones are not only supports for the body; since by their structure and formation they assist and control movement, it is necessary to recognize in them a dynamic quality that Vesalius sought to emphasize by the suggestion of movement in the poses of the skeletons.

The teleological argument that pervades the Fabrica, an inheritance from Galen, is very pronounced in the description of osteology. “By not first explaining the bones anatomists… deter [the student] from a worthy examination of the works of God.” Vesalius did not allow this doctrine of final causes to control his investigations, however, since unlike his medieval predecessors he sought to discover first structure and related function, and only then the ultimate purpose.

In his description of human osteology, the subject of book I, Vesalius made some of his strongest assaults upon Galenic anatomy. He called attention to Galen’s false assertion that the human mandible is formed of two bones and demonstrated the significance of this error as reflecting a dependence upon animal sources. Likewise he pointed to the fact that the Galenic description of the sternum as formed of seven segments is true of the ape but not of the adult human sternum, which has only three. Similarly the “humerus, according to Galen, is with the exception only of the femur, the largest bone of the body. Nevertheless the fibula and tibia are distinctly of greater length than the humerus.” In addition to such criticisms, there is extensive description of osteological detail, which, because much of it was wholly novel, required detailed illustrations, elaborately related by letter and number to the text. Despite some errors of description and occasional references to animal anatomy in the Galenic tradition, this first book represents Vesalian anatomy on the highest level. It concludes with a remarkable chapter on the procedure for preparation of the bones and articulation of the skeleton, since it was essential that a skeleton always be available at the dissection. Such a skeleton is a central figure of the title page.

As he had done with the bones, so Vesalius endeavored in book II to identify and give the fullest possible description of every muscle and its function; and an examination of the “muscle men” indicates the thoroughness with which that task was performed. Unfortunately, his system of identifying muscles numerically according to the part they served was cumbersome in comparison with the method of identification by origin and insertion introduced by Sylvius in 1555 and later revised and improved by the Swiss anatomist Gaspard Bauhin. The first two books represent the major Vesalian achievement in terms of accuracy of description and present the most telling blows against Galenic anatomy. In book II Vesalius also most frequently provided chapters dealing with the dissection procedure used to arrive at his conclusions. The description of the vascular system in book III is less satisfactory because of Vesalius’ failure to master the complexities of distribution of the vessels and because of the close relationship of the vascular system to Galenic physiology. Vesalius was compelled to subscribe to this for lack of any other theories. The errors in the Vesalian description of the distribution of the vessels are due to his reliance on Galen, as the only other writer to have attempted such a description in detail, and to the difficulty of discovering anew the entire vascular arrangement in rapidly putrefying human material. Although Vesalius was partly successful, as, for example, in his account of the interior mesenteric and the hemorrhoidal veins, there are many indications that he was compelled to rely for much of his account on the anatomy of animals. This is clearly apparent in the illustration of the “arterial man,” where the arrangement of the branchings of the aortic arch actually illustrate simian anatomy.

Book IV provides an account of the nervous system. It is introduced by an attempt to clarify and limit the meaning of the word “nerve” to the vehicle transmitting sensation and motion, because “leading anatomists declare that there are three kinds of nerve” : ligament, tendon, and aponeurosis. “From dissection of the body it is clear that no nerve arises from the heart as it seemed to Aristotle in particular and to no few others.” Although Vesalius was obliged to accept the Galenic explanation of nervous action as induced by animal spirit distributed through the nerves from the brain, his examination of the optic nerve led him to the conclusion that the nerves were not hollow, as Galen had asserted. “I inspected the nerves carefully, treating them with warm water, but I was unable to discover a passage of that sort in the whole course of the nerve.”

Vesalius accepted Galen’s classification of the cranial nerves into seven pairs even though he recognized more than that number and described a portion of the trochlear nerve. To avoid confusion he declared that he would “not depart from the enumeration of the cranial nerves that was established by the ancients.” Although he was not wholly successful in his efforts to trace the cranial nerves to their origins, and despite some confusion about their peripheral distribution, the level of knowledge in the text and illustrations was well above that of contemporary works and was not to be surpassed for about a generation. Vesalius was more successful in tracing the spinal nerves, but on the whole the account of the nerves must be described as being of lesser quality than some of the other books.

The description of the abdominal organs in book V is detailed and reasonably accurate. Since he knew of no alternative Vesalius accepted that aspect of Galen’s physiology which placed the manufacture of the blood in the liver. Nevertheless he denied not only that the vena cava takes its origin from the liver but also that the liver is composed of concreted blood. Here his strongest blow against Galen and medieval Galenic tradition was his denial, based on human and comparative anatomy, of the current belief in the liver’s multiple (usually five) lobes. According to Vesalius the number of lobes increased with the descent in the chain of animal life. In man the liver had a single mass, while the livers of monkeys, dogs, sheep, and other animals had multiple lobes that became more numerous and more clearly apparent. This difference once again proved the error of dependence upon nonhuman materials.

Vesalius also denied the erroneous Galenic belief that there was a bile duct opening into the stomach as well as one into the duodenum. In regard to the position of the kidneys, he had begun to move away from the erroneous view expressed in the Tabulae anatomicae that the right kidney was placed higher than the left. Although this error is illustrated in the Fabrica, the text declares that the reverse could also be true. Despite this partial error of traditionalism. Vesalius denied a second traditional opinion that the urine passed through the kidneys by means of a filter device. The filter theory had also been denied by Berengario da Carpi; but Vesalius went a step further by asserting that the “serous blood” was deliberately selected or drawn into the kidney’s membranous body and its “branchings” to be freed of its “serous humor” in the same way that the vena cava was able to select and acquire blood from the portal vein, and that the excrement was then carried by the ureters to the bladder.

The book ends with a discussion of human generation and the organs of reproduction. Although Vesalius denied the medieval doctrine of the seven-celled uterus and declared the traditional representation of the horned uterus to result from the use of animal specimens, his description of the fetus and fetal apparatus was of less significance, reflecting, as he admitted, the lack of sufficient pregnant human specimens.

Book VI describes the organs of the thorax. It is chiefly important for the description of the heart, which Vesalius described as approaching the nature of muscle in appearance, although it could not be true muscle since muscle supplied voluntary motion and the motion of the heart was involuntary. In this instance Vesalian principle bowed to Galenic theory, and recognition of the muscular substance of the heart had to await William Harvey’s investigations in the next century.

Like all his contemporaries Vesalius regarded the heart as formed of two chambers or ventricles. The right atrium was not considered to be a chamber but rather a continuation of the inferior and superior venae cavae, considered as a single, extended vessel; and the left atrium was thought to be part of the pulmonary vein. According to Galen the ventricles were divided by a midwall containing minute openings or pores through which the blood passed or seeped from the right ventricle into the left, an opinion that Vesalius strongly questioned even though by implication he was casting doubt on Galen’s cardiovascular physiology. “The septum of the ventricles having been formed, as I said, of the very thick substance of the heart… none of its pits-at least insofar as can be ascertained by the senses-penetrates from the right ventricle into the left. Thus we are compelled to astonishment at the industry of the Creator who causes the blood to sweat through from the right ventricle into the left through passages which escape our sight.” Finally Vesalius gave strong expression to his opinion of ecclesiastical censorship over the question of the heart as the site of the soul. After referring to the opinions of the major ancient philosophers on the location of the soul, he continued:

Lest I come into collision here with some scandalmonger or censor of heresy, I shall wholly abstain from consideration of the divisions of the soul and their locations, since today… you will find a great many censors of our very holy and true religion. If they hear someone murmur something about the opinions of Plato, Aristotle or his interpreters, or of Galen regarding the soul, even in anatomy where these matters especially ought to be examined, they immediately judge him to be suspect in his faith and somewhat doubtful about the soul’s immortality. They do not understand that this is a necessity for physicians if they desire to engage properly in their art…

The seventh and final book provides a description of the anatomy of the brain, accompanied by a series of detailed illustrations revealing the successive steps in its dissection. Until the time of Vesalius, illustrations of the brain and any accompanying text usually stressed the localization of intellectual activities in the ventricles, with perception in the anterior ventricles, judgment in the middle, and memory in the posterior. Sensation and motion were considered the work of animal spirit produced in a fine network of arteries at the base of the brain, the rete mirabile. The existence of the rete mirabile in the human brain had been questioned by Berengario da Carpi. It was now firmly denied by Vesalius, who showed the belief in this organ to have been the result of dissection of animals, since such an arterial network does in fact exist in ungulates. Vesalius was also the first to state that the ventricles had no function except the collection of fluid. Moreover, he denied that the mind could be split up into the separate mental faculties hitherto attributed to it. As a corollary he intimated that although animal spirit affected sensation and motion, it had nothing at all to do with mental activity-in short he suggested a divorce between the physical and mental animal. The discussion of the brain is concluded by a chapter on the procedure to be followed for its dissection and by a final, separate section on experiments in vivisection, derived and developed mostly from experiments described by Galen. The separate treatment of this latter material indicated a recognition of physiology as a discipline distinct from anatomy.

In the Fabrica Vesalius made many contributions to the body of anatomical knowledge, by description of structures hitherto unknown, by detailed descriptions of structures known only in the most elementary terms, and by the correction of erroneous descriptions. Despite his many errors his contribution was far greater than that of any previous author, and for a considerable time all anatomists, even those unsympathetic to him, were compelled to refer to the Fabrica. Its success and influence can be measured by the shrillness of Galenic apologists, by the plentiful but unacknowledged borrowings of many, and by the avowed indebtedness of the generous few, such as Falloppio. Although Colombo, Falloppio, and Eustachi corrected a number of Vesalius’ errors and in some respects advanced beyond him in their anatomical knowledge, Colombo published his anatomical studies sixteen years after the appearance of the Fabrica, Falloppio eighteen, and Eustachi twenty. Furthermore, they relied heavily upon Vesalius’ work, the detailed nature of which made it relatively easy for others to correct or to make further contributions. Although their accomplishments deserve recognition they were built upon Vesalian foundations.

More important than the anatomical information contained in the Fabrica was the scientific principle enunciated therein. This was beyond criticism, fundamental to anatomical research, and has remained so. It was not difficult to demonstrate Galen’s errors of anatomy, but such a demonstration was only a means to an end. Its significance lay in the reason for those errors: Galen’s attempt to project the anatomy of animals upon the human body. From time to time others had pointed to Galenic errors, but no one had proposed a consistent policy of doubting the authority of Galen or of any other recognized authority until the only true source of anatomical knowledge—dissection and observation of the human structure—had been tested. With the publication of the Fabrica all major investigators of anatomy were compelled to recognize the new principle, even though at first some paid no more than lip service to it.

For medical students and those with limited or no anatomical knowledge Vesalius composed a briefer work, the misnamed Epitome (1543) of the Fabrica. In the Epitome Vesalius returned to the tradition of the Tabulae anatomicae insofar as the illustrations in this work seem to have been considered more important than the text. The text was arranged somewhat differently from that of the Fabrica, since, although the first two chapters deal with bones and muscles, respectively, they are followed by chapters on the digestive system, cardiovascular system, nervous system (here including the brain), and finally the reproductive system. This is the simplified arrangement that Vesalius advocated “for one wholly unskilled in dissection.” Although Vesalius called the work an epitome and declared it a pathway to the Fabrica, such is not the case; the vast text of the greater work could not be compressed into such slight dimensions, and it is certainly not, as he also wrote, a summary. At best it is a condensation of selections from the Fabrica and, hence, not a major scientific work.

The second edition of the Fabrica was considerably altered both in style and to some degree in the arrangement of the contents. The actual alterations of the contents, found chiefly in books V and VI, include the addition of accounts of autopsies performed by Vesalius from 1543 onward, revision and correction of the description of the fetal membranes, and a clear statement that the cardiac septum is impermeable.

The impact of the new Vesalian illustrations was reflected as early as 1538 in such plagiarisms of the Tabulae anatomicae as those published in Paris (1538), Augsburg (1539), Cologne (1539), and Strasbourg (1541). The much more remarkable illustrations of the Fabrica were subject to even greater plagiarism, the first instance being the excellent copperplates of the Flemish engraver Thomas Geminus (1544), published with a slightly altered text of the Eapitome under the title Compendiosa totius anatomie delineatio aere exarata (London, 1545). If we except the uncompleted work of Canano, Geminus’ book has the further distinction of being the first anatomical treatise to contain copper-engraved illustrations. These were republished in London in 1553 and 1559, and by Jacques Grévin in Paris in 1564, 1565, and 1569; the original plates were copied and recopied thereafter for many subsequent editions. One example of the many plagiarisms of the illustrations of the Fabrica is the much reduced, crude woodcut copies that are to be found in Bernardino Montaña de Monserrate’s Libro de anathomia del hombre (1551), where they have, in fact, no relationship to the Galenic text of this first Spanish anatomical treatise in the vernacular. Somewhat better, larger, and more significant copies are to be found in Ambroise Paré’s Anatomie universelle (1561).

More fundamentally influential were the Vesalian principle underlying anatomical investigation, the method, and the contributions to knowledge of human anatomical structures. These were somewhat slower in diffusion and occasionally met opposition, as in Jacobus Sylvius’ violent attack against Vesalius’ anti–Galenism, Vaesani cujusdam calumniarum in Hippocratis Galenique rem anatomicam depulsio (1551) and the later attack of Francesco dal Pozzo, Apologia in anatome pro Galeno contra Andream Vessalium Bruxellensem (1562). Advanced by the successive occupants of the anatomical chair at Padua (Realdo Colombo, Gabriele Falloppio, and Fabrici), the Vesalian principles were thence diffused through Italy and later throughout western Europe. By the beginning of the seventeenth century, with the exception of a few conservative centers such as Paris and some parts of the Empire, Vesalian anatomy had gained both academic and general support.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The various editions of Vesalius’ writings and most of the literature about him are to be found in Harvey Cushing, A Bio–Bibliography of Andreas Vesalius, 2nd ed. (Hamden. Conn., 1962); more recent papers and studies of importance, some of them the result of the Vesalian celebrations of 1964, are listed in C. D. O’Malley, “A Review of Vesalian Literature,” in History of Science, IV (Cambridge, 1965), 1–14. M .H. Spielmann, The Iconography of Andreas Vesalius (London, 1925), deals with the various likenesses of Vesalius produced since the sixteenth century, although the only genuine portrait known is that in the Fabrica. The standard biography is C.D.O’Malley, Andreas Vesalius of Brussels, 1514–1564 (Berkeley—Los Angeles, 1964); and particular points of importance have been dealt with by Charles Singer, A Prelude to Modern Science (Cambridge, 1946), and Ruben Ericksson, Andreas Vesalius’ first Public Anatomy at Bologna 1540 (Uppsala, 1959). See also Moritz Roth, Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis (Berlin, 1892).

C. D. O’Malley

Vesalius, Andreas (1514–1564)

views updated Jun 08 2018

VESALIUS, ANDREAS (15141564)

VESALIUS, ANDREAS (15141564), Belgian anatomist. Born in Brussels, Vesalius came from a family of physicians with professional links to the courts of Austria and Burgundy. Between 1530 and 1536 he studied at the universities of Louvain and Paris. He acquired skill in the technique of dissection and a thorough comprehension of Galenic anatomy in Paris, where a deep philological and hermeneutical reassessment of the Galenic corpus was under way. Due to the outbreak of the war between Charles V and Francis I, Vesalius returned to Louvain in 1536, and there he published the Paraphrasis in Nonum Librum Rhazae (Paraphrase of the ninth book of Rhazes). After a brief stay in Venice as a surgeon, he settled in Padua, where he took a degree in medicine in 1537. In the same year he was appointed lecturer of surgery. As a teacher, he combined in a revolutionary way the functions of lecturer, demonstrator, and dissector. Between 1538 and 1539 he published the Tabulae Anatomicae Sex (Six anatomical plates), a set of six large sheets of anatomical woodcuts accompanied by brief explanatory notes, and the so-called Venesection letter, a defense of the humanist and Greek view on bloodletting against medieval and Arab interpretations. On the basis of both his outstanding knowledge of Galen's texts (Vesalius also collaborated to the Giunta edition of Galen's Opera Omnia, published between 15411542) and his anatomical findings, he wrote De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem (Seven books on the structure of the human body), published in Basel by Joannes Oporinus in 1543. After the publication of the Fabrica, Vesalius sought employment in the imperial medical service. He became military surgeon and personal physician to Emperor Charles V (ruled 15191556). Between 1543 and 1544 he returned briefly to Italy, giving public anatomies in Padua, Bologna, and Pisa. In the Epistola Rationem Modumque Propinandi Radicis Chynae Decocti (1546; Letter on the manner of administering the china-root), he investigated the therapeutic value of the china-root. After Charles V's abdication in 1556, he was appointed physician to the Netherlanders at the Spanish court by Philip II. In the same year he published a revised edition of the Fabrica containing some relevant additions on cardiovascular physiology. He died in 1564 during a pilgrimage journey to Jerusalem.

De Humani Corporis Fabrica represents an extraordinary intellectual accomplishment that combines anatomical investigation, artistic ingenuity, woodcut craftmanship, and typographical expertise. Vesalius's intention was to give a most detailed and reliable account of the human body, an account purged of previous errors, based on direct reference to cadavers, and corroborated by the use of animal vivisection and comparative anatomy. The Fabrica can be viewed as both the foundation of modern anatomy and as a reference handbook for those practitioners who could not have direct access to dissection material. The anatomical illustrations were in all likelihood the product of artists and draftsmen from Titian's studio. Vesalius planned the enterprise and directed the execution, and it can be assumed that he had some share in the actual draftsmanship.

The Fabrica is more a correction of errors in Galen than it is an announcement of revolutionary discoveries. Vesalius was a formidable teacher and an outstanding performer of anatomical demonstrations, capable of entrancing observers with his manual dexterity. The importance of his work lies in his advanced pedagogical techniques and in his methodological views about anatomy. He introduced the use of anatomical drawings as a teaching device, mnemonic aid, and alternative source of information in the absence of a sufficient supply of cadavers. He revolutionized anatomical practice by establishing a reliable correspondence between the dissected body, the text of reference, and the illustrations. He contributed significantly to the standardization of anatomical nomenclature. From the religious point of view, Vesalius's work touched on some highly critical points in contemporary theological debates, such as the location of the faculties of the soul, the physical similarities between human and animal brains, the existence of the reticular plexus at the base of the brain, and the manufacture of animal spirits.

See also Anatomy and Physiology ; Medicine ; Scientific Illustration ; Scientific Method ; Surgeons .

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Primary Source

Vesalius, Andreas. On the Fabric of the Human Body, Books I II. Translated by William Frank Richardson. San Francisco, 19981999.

Secondary Sources

Cushing, Harvey. Bio-bibliography of Andreas Vesalius. New York, 1943.

O'Malley, Charles D. Andreas Vesalius of Brussels, 1514 1564. Los Angeles, 1964.

Siraisi, Nancy G. "Vesalius and the Reading of Galen's Teleology." In Medicine and the Italian Universities, 12501600. Leiden, Netherlands, 2001.

Guido Giglioni

Andreas Vesalius

views updated Jun 08 2018

Andreas Vesalius

1514-1564

Anatomist

Sources

Influence. Andreas Vesalius is best known today as the founder of modern medical anatomy, on account of his technique, his challenge to receive ideas about the structure of the human body, and his innovative design for an anatomical textbook. His volume initiated a revolution in how anatomy was taught in the late-Renaissance and early-modern curriculum. Yet, if one can place him among the pioneers of modern anatomy, he is perhaps better regarded as the last and best of the ancient anatomists and taken as a measure of the success of medical humanism in sixteenth-century Europe.

Education. Vesalius was born in Brussels, Belgium, which was then a part of the Holy Roman Empire. His father was an apothecary in service to the emperor, Charles V. Vesalius mastered Latin in Brussels and then enrolled at the University of Louvain in 1530, where he must have made the acquaintance of Gerardus Mercator, who was also beginning his studies at that time. Vesalius studied philosophy and liberal arts in the arts faculty, as did all beginning students, but soon turned his attention to medicine. At that time medical education was not as advanced in the north European universities as at Paris, Montpellier, and the schools of Spain and northern Italy, and Vesalius traveled to Paris. In Paris he studied under Jacobus Sylvius and Johannes Guinter of Andernach, two prominent humanist medical scholars, physicians, and teachers.

Dissections. The humanist movement began in art and literature in Italy in the late fourteenth century, as scholars turned their attention away from the scholastic method and medieval sensibilities and instead emphasized participation in human affairs, the study of history, and the recovery of ancient artistic, architectural, and intellectual forms. The method applied to the latter involved the search for and careful assessment of manuscripts written in the ancient languages. Initially, humanists were enthusiastic about the poetry, prose, dramaturgy, and design of ancient Greece and Rome, but by the early sixteenth century, humanism had become a widespread intellectual movement and embraced other subjects as well, including medicine. New attention was brought to bear on the medical writings of Galen and Cornelius Celsus, whose Ciceronian-era Latin prose provided a model for Renaissance medical treatises. Some of Galen’s treatises, such as On the Use of the Parts, were known and translated already in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, but were long and complicated and therefore were only slowly incorporated into learned medicine. This treatise and other tracts in which Galen discussed human anatomy aroused the interest of surgery students and anatomists in the fourteenth century and contributed to the dissection manuals that guided students of anatomy through the annual human and animal dissections that the better medical schools required students to attend. Galen had been an avid dissector of animals and his descriptions of human anatomy and physiology led medieval readers to suppose that he had dissected humans as well—which he surely would have, had not the mores of the Imperial Greco-Roman culture discouraged him. Princes and city councils of medieval Europe, eager to facilitate surgical training, authorized the annual anatomical demonstrations and provided some bodies of executed criminals for this purpose. Before Vesalius, such demonstrations served to illustrate what was described in the texts rather than to encourage research and verification of traditional knowledge, and often the actual dissection would be undertaken by a surgeon or other paid sector, who would dissect the body as the professor of anatomy read the appropriate section of a surgical text. This process was how anatomy was taught when Vesalius was a student, but he soon discovered the virtue of firsthand experience, practice, repetition, and close attention to anatomical detail.

Surgical Lectures. During the fifteenth century, On anatomical procedures, Galen’s primary presentation of how dissection should be performed, was translated and published and served to invigorate interest among humanist physicians in anatomical method. Vesalius’s teacher, Johannes Guinter of Andernach, used it as a basis for his own Institutiones anatomicæ (Anatomical Institutions, 1536) and sought to replicate Galen’s methods. Vesalius must have been an avid student, since Guinter spoke well of him in this treatise. Vesalius was forced to leave Paris in 1536 on account of war between France and the Holy Roman Empire, and he returned to Louvain, where he received a bachelor’s degree in medicine in 1537. That same year he headed for Padua in northern Italy, where he enrolled, took his examination, and was awarded the M.D. in one semester. Such was his expertise that he was immediately appointed to a surgical lectureship and began giving the annual dissections, which he performed himself as he lectured—breaking with the usual tradition. To facilitate his teaching, Vesalius produced six anatomical charts in 1538. These proved immediately popular, and he quickly published them to forestall plagiarism and secure his reputation. Vesalius also edited and published an augmented version of Guinter’s Anatomical Institutions, in which he first pointed out in print several of the shortcomings of Galen’s observations.

Popular Teacher. Vesalius was popular as a teacher and was reappointed in 1539 with an increase in salary. The following year he accepted an invitation from the students at the University of Bologna to hold a series of lectures and demonstrations there in tandem with lectures on Galenic anatomy given by Professor Curtius. During the course of these lectures Vesalius realized that anatomical knowledge must be based on firsthand observation rather than dependence on Galen’s writings, which contained many errors that reflected his reliance on animal specimens.

God’s Handiwork. When Vesalius returned to his lectureship at Padua, he began to compose De humani corporis fabrica (On the Architecture of the Human Body), which he published in Basel, Switzerland, in 1543. The title of the book is often rendered literally, On the Fabric of the Human Body, but the Latin wotd fabrica clearly refers to a design that is fabricated by a maker or craftsman (a faber), and therefore ought to be conceived in the sixteenth-century Christian context, where Creation immediately implied Creator. Thus, fabrica is better translated here as architecture to reflect Vesalius’s opinion that study of human anatomy was a form of appreciation of the Creator’s handiwork. In this way he followed Galen, who, though not at all a Christian, viewed anatomy as a kind of appreciation and worship of the divinity and intelligence that he considered to be manifest in all nature and foremost in the human body.

Classic Text. Vesalius went to considerable expense and effort, hiring artisans from the foremost shops in Venice to supply the ample illustrations in his book, which set a new standard both for the quality of anatomical illustration and for medical pedagogy. Vesalius keyed the parts of the body in these illustrations to their descriptions in the text, carefully linking prose explanation to pictorial representation. The result was an enormously sought-after and widely emulated book that is among the most valuable in medical history collections today.

Royal Service. Following the publication of his book, Vesalius took a position as Imperial Physician to Emperor Charles V, who had previously employed his father. In this job he also worked as a military surgeon and learned techniques being practiced on the battlefield—always a source of surgical innovation. After Charles abdicated the throne to his brother Ferdinand, Vesalius entered the service of Charles’s son, the future emperor Philip II, and moved to the new imperial court in Spain. He remained there until 1564, when he embarked on a trip to the Holy Land. The return voyage was troubled by storms, and Vesalius was put ashore on a Greek island, where he died.

Medical Humanist. In retrospect, Vesalius must be seen as a medical humanist, whose mission was to restore the art and science of anatomy to the level of expertise evident in Galen’s works. His approach to anatomy was wholly within the Galenic tradition, as was his understanding of human biology and medicine. However, in the process of reviving Galen’s methods, which included a forgotten technique that enabled the chest of a live pig or other animal to be opened without collapsing the lungs and killing it, he observed and noted several instances in which Galen had erred. As a result of his direct anatomical experiences, and perhaps in keeping with the methodological teachings of Aristotle, which specified that knowledge of general structures was acquired through repeated observations of individual examples, Vesalius stressed that anatomy must be experienced firsthand. Both of these traditions led William Harvey, who studied at Padua at the end of the century, to break with Galen’s understanding of human physiology and discover the true operation of the heart and the circulation of the blood through the body.

Sources

Baldasar Heseler, Andreas Vesalius’ First Public Anatomy at Bologna, 1540: An Eyewitness Report, translated by Ruben Eriksson (Uppsala, Sweden: Almquist & Wiksel, 1959).

G. A. Lindeboom, Andreas Vesalius and His Opus Magnum: A Biographical Sketch and an Introduction to the Fabrica (Nieuwendijk: De Forel, 1975).

Charles Donald O’Malley, Andreas Vesalius of Brussels 1514-1564 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1964).

Andreas Vesalius

views updated May 09 2018

Andreas Vesalius

The Belgian anatomist Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) was the founder of modern anatomy. His major work, "De humani corporis fabrica, " is a milestone in scientific progress.

Andreas Vesalius was born on Dec. 31, 1514, in Brussels, the son of Andries van Wesele and his wife, Isabel Crabbe. Vesalius's paternal ancestors, who hailed from the German town of Wesel, came to Brussels in the early 15th century and became prominent as physicians and pharmacists. His father served as pharmacist to Margaret of Austria and later to Emperor Charles V. His great-grandfather, Johannes Wesalia, was the head of the medical school at the University of Louvain, where Vesalius started his medical studies in 1530. He matriculated as Andres van Wesel de Bruxella.

In 1533 Vesalius transferred to the medical school of the University of Paris. One of his two teachers of anatomy there was Johann Guenther von Andernach, a personable man but a poor anatomist. The other was Jacobus Sylvius, who departed from tradition by giving some role to dissecting in anatomical instructions. Both teachers gave in their own ways a telling testimony of their student's anatomical expertise. Guenther, in a book published in 1536, recorded in glowing terms Vesalius's discovery of the spermatic vessels. Sylvius, however, decried violently Vesalius's daring claim that Galen, the great authority in physiology since classical times, wrote on the inner organs of the body without ever seeing them.

Because of the outbreak of war between France and Charles V, Vesalius, a citizen of the Low Countries, which were a part of the Holy Roman Empire, had to leave Paris in 1536. He returned to Louvain, where, at the recommendation of Guenther, Vesalius, still a student, was permitted to conduct public dissections. He also published a Paraphrase of the Ninth Book of Rhazes (Rhazes, also known as al-Rasi, was a Moslem physician of the early 10th century), in which he made a considerable effort to substitute Latin terms for the still heavily Arabic medical terminology.

But Vesalius soon became embroiled in disputes with faculty members, evidencing both his genius and his quarrelsome character. He was practically compelled to go the next year to the University of Padua. There Vesalius passed his doctoral examination with such honors in December 1537 that he was immediately appointed professor of surgery and anatomy. In 1538 he published six sheets of his anatomical drawings under the title Tabulae anatomicae sex. The publication was a signal success. Because of the great demand the sheets soon were reprinted, without Vesalius's authorization, in Cologne, Paris, Strasbourg, and elsewhere. In 1539 there followed his essay on bloodletting in which he first described the veins that draw blood from the side of the torso. This opened the way to the study of the venous values and led ultimately to the discovery of the circulation of blood by William Harvey.

Major Work

Vesalius's commitment to actual observing was much in evidence in his edition of some of Galen's works in 1540 but especially in his epoch-making De humani corporis fabrica libri septem (Seven Books on the Construction of the Human Body), published in 1543 in Basel. Book 1 on the bones was generally correct but represented no major advance. Book 2 on the muscles was a masterpiece. Book 3 on blood vessels was exactly the opposite. Somewhat better was book 4 on the nerves, a great advance on everything written on the topic before, but it was largely outmoded a century later. Excellent was his treatment in book 5 of the abdominal organs. Book 6 dealt with the chest and neck, while book 7 was devoted to the brain. Some of the woodcut illustrations of the Fabrica are among the best of 16th-century drawings and probably were executed by Jan Stephan van Calcar. Vesalius's own drawings were of moderate value. The revolutionary aspect of the work was the dominating role of observation as the very foundation of progress in anatomy. The importance of the large folio was immediately recognized by the fact that almost simultaneously with the original an epitome of it was published.

Vesalius was, like some other geniuses of his age, such as Copernicus and Thomas More, a daring innovator and a strong traditionalist at the same time. Thus Vesalius, the meticulous observer, did not part with Galen as far as theory was concerned. He was also a child of his age in carefully paving his way into the imperial court. No sooner was his Fabrica published than he sought service on the medical staff of Charles V and was immediately accepted.

In 1544 Vesalius married Anne von Hamme and also increased his holdings by a substantial inheritance from his father. In 1546 came his Letter on the Chinese Root, on a worthless but very popular medicine. The letter's true significance derived from the fact that in it Vesalius replied to the detractors of his Fabrica and corrected some of its erroneous statements. From 1553 on Vesalius had private practice as a physician in Brussels, and in 1556 his official ties with the court of Charles V came to an end.

The second edition of the Fabrica, in 1555, contained many improvements on the first, but in retrospect it was also a disappointment. One wonders about the new course medicine might have taken, had Vesalius dedicated himself completely to the cause of anatomical research. Some time after the accession of Philip II to the imperial throne, Vesalius became again one of the imperial physicians. Vesalius's absence from medical schools showed itself in his Examination of Gabriele Fallopio's Anatomic Observations (1561), in which he had to avoid passing judgment on a number of points in Fallopio's book because he had no way of verifying them.

It is a moot question whether Vesalius used a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1564 as a pretext to leave Spain and the imperial court. Some claimed that he went to the Holy Land to study medicinal plants on the plains of Jericho, a topic on which he is known to have discoursed on his way there. Vesalius might have very well made the pilgrimage out of devotion, as did many millions before and after him. Upon his return from Jerusalem he was to take the chair of the suddenly deceased Fallopio in Padua, but he died on the island of Zenta off the Greek coast.

Further Reading

The standard scholarly presentation of Vesalius's life and work is Charles Donald O'Malley, Andreas Vesalius of Brussels (1964). O'Malley is also the coauthor with J. B. dec. M. Saunders of The Illustrations from the Works of Andreas Vesalius of Brussels (1950). Jerome Tarshis, Father of Modern Anatomy: Andreas Vesalius (1969), is written in the popular vein and with a somewhat tendentious pen. The bibliography of the various editions of Vesalius's works, together with a list of Vesaliana and with many facsimiles of the title pages, is given in Harvey Cushing, A Bio-bibliography of Andreas Vesalius (1962). □

Andreas Vesalius

views updated May 14 2018

Andreas Vesalius

1514-1564

Belgian Anatomist, Physician, and Surgeon

Andreas Vesalius revolutionized the study of anatomy, contributed immeasurably toward making medicine a rigorous empirical science, and wrote one of the most important books in medical history.

Andries van Wesel is generally known by the Latin form of his name, Andreas Vesalius. He was born in Brussels and destined to serve the Holy Roman Emperors. His great-great-grandfather, Peter Witing, was physician to Emperor Frederick III; his great-grandfather, Johannes Witing van Wesele (d. 1476), was physician to Frederick and Archduke Maximilian; his grandfather, Everart van Wesele (d. c. 1485), was physician to Maximilian; and his father, Andries van Wesele (c. 1479-1527), was apothecary to Emperor Maximilian I (the former Archduke) and Emperor Charles V. Frederick granted to Johannes a coat of arms with three weasels. This device is commonly seen in representations of Vesalius.

Vesalius received a Catholic education in Brussels, probably at the School of the Brothers of the Common Life, from about 1520 until 1529, when he entered the University of Louvain. He studied there until 1533, then at the University of Paris until 1536. He received his M.B. from Louvain and his M.D. from the University of Padua, Italy, both in 1537. From 1537 to 1544 he taught surgery and anatomy at Padua. In 1537 he published his paraphrase of nine books of the Arabic physician Rhazes (c. 854-c. 925) and in 1539 his first Epistola (The Venesection Letter).

When Vesalius was a student the dominant medical system in Western Europe derived from the Greek physician Galen (c. 130-c. 200). Vesalius had no reason to question Galen until, while at Paris, he began his lifelong habit of doing all his own dissections. The more he saw with his own eyes the less he believed in the anatomical textbooks. He became preoccupied with anatomical science, and even stole a corpse from a gibbet in Louvain in 1536. By 1540 he recognized that many fundamental Galenic presentations of human anatomy were wrong.

At Padua he hired artists to prepare accurate anatomical charts for his students. His first original publication, Tabulae anatomicae sex (Six anatomical charts) appeared in 1538. The illustrations were done by the Flemish artist Jan Stephan van Calcar (1499-1546?), a student of Titian (1488?-1576).

In 1540 at the University of Bologna, Vesalius publicly announced that Galenic anatomy was not human anatomy, but the anatomy of apes, pigs, and dogs transposed into human form. He had already proved this assertion to his own satisfaction, but to demonstrate it to the world, he began to prepare his monumental work, De humani corporis fabrica libri septem (Seven books on the structure of the human body), and an outline version to be published simultaneously, Suorum de humani corporis fabrica librorum epitome (Epitome of his books on the structure of the human body). Both appeared in 1543. Vesalius visited Titian's studio in Venice in 1542 and Calcar probably did most of the illustrations for both the Fabrica and the Epitome.

Vesalius personally gave the uniquely colored dedication copy of the Fabrica to Charles V in Mainz, Germany, in 1543. Charles was impressed enough to appoint Vesalius his household physician. Vesalius abruptly abandoned the study of anatomy to become an imperial courtier, but remained active in other areas of medical research. In 1546 he published his second Epistola (The China Root Letter), about syphilis. He published a definitive edition of the Fabrica in 1555, but his primacy as an anatomist was usurped in his lifetime by his student Gabriele Falloppio (1523-1562).

In 1544 he married Anne van Hamme. Thereafter he spent his life mostly traveling with the emperor throughout Europe, sometimes as a military surgeon. When Charles V abdicated in 1556, he created Vesalius Count Palatine with a pension. With Ambroise Paré (c. 1509-1590), Vesalius attended the dying French King Henri II in 1559. The same year he moved to Madrid as court physician to Spanish King Philip II. He died on the Greek island of Zacynthus while returning from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.

Vesalius inaugurated an important subgenre of medical publications: "artistic anatomy." His Fabrica and the hundreds of books that followed it in this subgenre are renowned not only for their scientific accuracy, but also for their beauty and power as aesthetic objects.

ERIC V.D. LUFT

Vesalius, Andreas

views updated Jun 08 2018

Vesalius, Andreas

Belgian anatomist
15141564

Andreas Vesalius was the founder of modern human anatomy. Before his time, medical illustrations served more to decorate a page than to teach human structure. Humans were often shown in squatty froglike postures with only crude representations of the locations and relationships of the internal organs. Often the figures were surrounded by signs of the zodiac, as astrologers thought each constellation influenced a particular body organ. Medical professors taught from an elevated chair, the cathedra, reading dryly in Latin from such ancient authorities as Roman physician Galen, while a low-ranking barber-surgeon removed organs from a rotting corpse and held them up for the medical students to see. Neither embalming nor cadaver refrigeration were yet known to Western medicine, and the professors considered it beneath their dignity to touch the foul cadaver.

Vesalius revolutionized the teaching of medicine. A native of Brussels, educated at Paris and Padua, he taught medicine at the University of Padua in Italy. Vesalius broke with tradition and personally dissected cadavers with his students. He soon learned that the anatomy described by Galen was highly inaccurate, and he commissioned artists from the studio of Italian painter Titian to render more accurate illustrations. When other anatomists began plagiarizing these illustrations, Vesalius had them published in a seven-volume work, De Humani Corporis Fabrica (On the Structure of the Human Body), in 1543. This was the first accurate atlas of human structure, and ushered in the era of modern human anatomy.

After the publication of the Fabrica, Vesalius enjoyed an illustrious career as a physician to, among others, Charles V, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and his son, Philip II. In 1564, Vesalius died in a shipwreck on the way home from a voyage to the Holy Land.

Twenty-first-century anatomical atlases, such as Frank Netter's Atlas of Human Anatomy, Carmine Clemente's Anatomy, and Anne Agur's Grant'sAtlas of Anatomy, and even the standard college textbooks of human anatomy owe a great debt to the tradition begun by Vesalius.

see also History of Medicine

Kenneth S. Saladin

Bibliography

Moore, John A. Science as a Way of Knowing. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993.

Vesalius, Andreas. The Illustrations from the Works of Andreas Vesalius of Brussels. New York: Dover, 1973.

Vesalius, Andreas

views updated May 21 2018

Vesalius, Andreas

Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) is widely credited with developing modern anatomical studies. Vesalius was born in Brussels, Belgium, to a family established in medicine for several generations. Young Vesalius showed an early interest in anatomy. He attended the University of Louvain, then studied medicine at the University of Paris, where he became skilled at dissection under teachers who were dedicated followers of Galen, the ancient Greek physician.

Early Career

After a working as a military surgeon, Vesalius enrolled at the University of Padua (Italy), receiving his medical degree in 1537. As soon as he became a lecturer at the university, he began to establish new ways of teaching and demonstrating anatomy. Contrary to the standard practice, Vesalius performed dissections himself during lectures and illustrated the lesson with large, detailed anatomical charts. The lectures were enormously popular and demand for the charts was so great that Vesalius had them printed.

As Vesalius proceeded with his dissections, he increasingly noted obvious conflicts between what he saw in the human body and what Galen described. Galen's errors, Vesalius reasoned, arose because the ancient anatomist relied only on animal dissections, which often did correlate to human anatomy. (Galen was not allowed to dissect human bodies because of religious restrictions.) Vesalius set down the principle that true, fundamental medical knowledge must come from human dissection, practiced by each individual physician.

Vesallus Writes a Book

To attract established physicians to the study of anatomy, Vesalius wrote one of the most important books in medical history. Published in 1543, it was the world's first textbook of anatomy called De humani corporis fabrica ("The Fabric of the Human Body"). Vesalius carefully supervised all aspects of the book's production. The Fabrica contained detailed anatomical descriptions of all parts of the human body, including directions for carrying out dissections, magnificent, detailed illustrations, probably by students from the famous painter Titian's studio, and a clear explanation of the objective, scientific method of conducting medical research.

The publication of the Fabrica rocked medicine to its foundations and was the subject of bitter controversy. For reasons not exactly clear, Vesalius abruptly quit anatomical research and became court physician to two kings. In 1564 he left Spain for a trip to the Holy Land (Palestine), perhaps intending to return to teaching in Padua. On the way back from Palestine, however, his ship was wrecked. Vesalius died on the island of Zante at the age of fifty.

Vesalius, Andreas

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Vesalius, Andreas (1514–64) Belgian physician and anatomist, who was a professor at Padua for six years before becoming a physician to the Habsburg court. He is remembered for producing in 1538–43 definitive text and anatomical drawings of the human body, which were made from actual dissections.

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Andreas Vesalius

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