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Innovators & Pioneers
Andreas Vesalius
Born: December 31, 1514 in Brussels, Belgium
Died: October 15, 1564 in Zenta, Greece
Nationality: Belgian
Occupation: anatomist
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 valves 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 Readings
- 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. de C. 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).
Source: From ENCYCLOPEDIA OF WORLD BIOGRAPHY, 2nd ed. 17 vols. Gale Research, 1998. Reprinted by permission of The Gale Group.
Link: http://www.galegroup.com
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