André du Laurens explained
André du Laurens (December 9, 1558 - August 6, 1609) was a French physician.
Biography
Du Laurens was born in Tarascon and was rector of the medical school at Montpellier. He was physician to King Henry IV.
His 1594 book comprising four "discourses"—first written in French, not Latin—was an early attempt at scientific communication. It was translated into English by Richard Surphlet in 1599.
His Historia anatomica underwent many editions.
One of his brothers, Honoré du Laurens (1564-1612), was archbishop of Embrun.
Bibliography
Selection
- Admonitio ad Simonem Petræum (1593)
- Discours de la conservation de la veuë: des maladies melancoliques: des catarrhes, & de la vieillesse (1594)
- Apologia pro Galeno et impugnatio novæ ac falsæ demonstrationis de communione vasorum cordis in foetu (1595)
- De crisibus libri tres (1596)[1]
- Historia anatomica humani corporis. Paris (1600)
Complete works
References
- Berriot-Salvadore, Évelyne (2008), "Les œuvres françaises d'André Dulaurens", Esculape et Dionysos. Mélanges en l'honneur de Jean Céard, Genève: Droz, p. 243–254.
- —Jeanne is André's sister.
- Wear, A. (1983), "William Harvey and the “way of the anatomists”", History of Science, 21, p. 227–230
External links
- List of online works on Gallica
Notes and References
- Refer to Galen's book with the same title.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=Sx88hfjLvL4C&pg=PP12 Correspondence between the translator and the author