Francis Fabricius Explained
Francis Fabricius (–1572) was a physician and humanist from the Low Countries. Fabricius was born in Roermond around 1510 and studied the humanities in Cologne, where he excelled at Latin and Greek.[1] He went on to study medicine and in 1533 was established as a physician in Deventer. From 1545 to 1552 he was based in Aachen, where he studied the medicinal properties of the thermal springs. He died in 1572.[2]
Works
- Thermae aquenses, sive de Balneorum naturalium (Cologne, Jaspar Gennepaeus, 1546). Reprinted 1564, 1617.
- In Dutch as Van den warmen baden, ende in sunderheyt den genen die tot Aken sijn (Maastricht, Jacob Bathen, 1552).[3]
Notes and References
- [J.-J. Thonissen]
- "Fabricius, François", in Dictionnaire des sciences médicales: biographie médicale, vol. 4 (Paris, C. L. F. Panckoucke, 1821), p. 92. On Google Books.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=9dtNAAAAcAAJ Van den warmen baden