Cesare Magati Explained

Honorific Prefix:Doctor
Birth Name:Cesare Camillo Magati
Birth Date:27 February 1552
Birth Place:Scandiano, Duchy of Modena
Death Place:Bologna, Papal States
Nationality:Italian
Other Names:Liberato da Scandiano
Occupation:Physician, surgeon, monk
Fields:Surgery
Parents:Giorgio Magati and Claudia Magati (née Mattacoda)
Known For:promoting the idea of natural processes in wound healing

Cesare Magati or Caesar Magatus (14 July 1577 – 9 September 1647) was an Italian physician and professor of medicine. He is known chiefly from his book De rara medicatione Vulnerum (1616) where he promoted the idea of natural processes in wound healing. In 1618 he joined the Capuchin Order and the next year he took on the name of Padre Liberato da Scandiano.

Life and work

Magati was born in Scandiano, Reggio Emilia, in the landed family of Giorgio and Laura Mattacoda. A brother, Giovanni Battista, became a physician while a sister became the grandmother of Antonio Vallisneri. He studied at Pauda and from 1596, medicine at the University of Bologna. Graduating in 1597 he worked at the Hospital of Santa Maria della Consolazione in Rome. He was influenced by the teachings of Flaminio Rota, Giulio Cesare Claudini, and Giovanni Battista Cortese. He then took the exam of the College of Physicians and became a surgeon at the Hospital of Santa Anna. He then returned to Scandiano and around 1612, through the influence of Marquis Enzio Bentivoglio, he became a lecturer in surgery at Ferrara. In 1618 he became very ill and gave up teaching. He joined the Capuchin order as a lay brother in 1618 and took his vows in Ravenna the next year, and going by the name of Padre Liberato da Scandiano. He continued to practice medicine for the House of Este.[1]

In 1647 Magati was operated on for gall-stones at Bologna but he died three days after the surgery.

Magati's major contribution was in wound hygiene and healing. He went against the contemporary practice of frequent change in dressing and the use of ointments. He instead suggested that natural processed played a key role in healing and that these processes needed to be aided. For this he is remembered as a fundamental reformer of surgery.[2] The principles outlined by Magati in his De rara medicatione vulnerum excited a great deal of debate: they were confirmed by the renowned physician Ludovico Settala (1552–1633) but were challenged mostly by Daniel Sennert.[3]

Main works

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External links

Notes and References

  1. Cesare Magati. Spanning over centuries. Fughelli, Patrizia. Medicina Historica. 2017. 1. 1. 7–12.
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