Who is the Father of Anatomy?
Andreas Vesalius is known as the father of Anatomy.
Here are some quick facts about Andreas Vesalius:
Birth | 31 December 1514 |
Death | 15 October 1564 |
Education | University of Leuven (M.D., 1537), University of Paris |
Known for | De humani corporis fabrica (On the Fabric of the Human Body) |
Fields | Anatomy |
Andreas Vesalius — Father of Anatomy
Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician, born in Brussels. He is known as the father of anatomy because he was the first to describe human anatomy in detail based on his own dissections, and he did this at a time when most anatomical teaching was derived from books and animal dissection.
He became a professor of surgery and anatomy at the University of Padua, where he also taught medicine. His greatest work, De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem (“On the Fabric of Human Body”, or “On the Structure of the Human Body”), appeared in 1543.
Vesalius rejected the medieval notion that veins contained air. He also discovered and described the pulmonary circulation system (which had been described but not recognized since Galen).
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