Leonardo Fioravanti (doctor) explained

Leonardo Fioravanti (15171588) was a noted doctor, surgeon and alchemist active in Italy in the 16th century.[1]

Biography

Born in Bologna on October 5, 1517, to Gabriele and Margarite Fioravanti, Leonardo was baptised at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Saint Peter. His family had ties to the celebrated architects Aristotele Fioravanti, Bartolomeo et Aristote. He received his first degree in medicine at Naples, and his second on March 27, 1568, at Bologna. He was elevated into the nobility by the king of Spain.

He lived for a time in Rome and in Venice, and also in other important Italian cities. In Palermo, he performed the first recorded splenectomy on Italian soil.

Historians "have long portrayed Leonardo Fioravanti as the epitome of the cunning and dishonest charlatan."[2] Although "he was by no means the first or the only one to take to the road."[3]

Fioravanti died in Bologna in 1588.

Works

Further reading

. Piero Camporesi . Camminare il mondo. Vita e avventure di Leonardo Fioravanti medico del Cinquecento . Italian . . 1997 . 978-8811680789 .

References

  1. http://www.mf.uni-lj.si/acta-apa/acta-apa-01-2/6-2-01.html Origins and development of Bologna's Dermatological School
  2. Book: Elmer, Peter . The Healing Arts: Health, Disease and Society in Europe 1500-1800 . 2004-03-09 . Manchester University Press . 38. 978-0-7190-6734-1 . en.
  3. Book: Gentilcore, David . Medical Charlatanism in Early Modern Italy . 2006-09-21 . OUP Oxford . 267. 978-0-19-924535-2 . en.
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=hf81AQAAMAAJ A Short Discourse on Surgery by Leonardo Fioravanti, translated into English by John Hester in 1580.