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Antonio Benivieni

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Antonio Benivieni (1443-1502) was a Florentine physician who pioneered the use of the autopsy, a postmortum dissection of a deceased patient's body used to understand the cause of death. Benivieni published a treatise entitled De Abditis Morborum Causis ("The Hidden Causes of Disease") which is now considered one of the first works in the science of Pathology. Some of the protocols developed... Read enhanced Wikipedia article

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Antonio Benivieni Benivieni published a treatise entitled De Abditis Morborum Causis ("The Hidden Causes of Disease") which is now considered one of the first works in the science of Pathology.

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Antonio Benivieni Benivieni published a treatise entitled De Abditis Morborum Causis ("The Hidden Causes of Disease") which is now considered one of the first works in the science of Pathology.

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Antonio Benivieni Antonio Benivieni (1443-1502) was a Florentine physician who pioneered the use of the autopsy, a postmortum dissection of a deceased patient's body used to understand the cause of death.

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History of pathology In the 15th century, anatomic dissection was repeatedly used by the Italian physician Antonio Benivieni (1443-1502) to determine cause of death.

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    Antonio Benivieni

    Antonio Benivieni (1443-1502) was a Florentine physician who pioneered the use of the autopsy, a postmortum dissection of a deceased patient's body used to understand the cause of death.
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    History of pathology

    The history of pathology can be traced to the earliest application of the scientific method to the field of medicine, a development which occurred in the Middle East during the Islamic Golden Age and in Western Europe during the Italian Renaissance. ... Antonio Benivieni is also credited with having introduced necropsy to the medical field.
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    The Gentleman Usher

    The Gentleman Usher is an early seventeenth-century stage play, a comedy written by George Chapman that was first published in 1606. ... Chapman took the medical material included in his play from a book written by the fifteenth-century Florentine physician Antonio Benivieni, though he reworks that material "with striking images and with fine poetry that have no counterpart in Benivieni."
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    Antonio Manetti

    Antonio Manetti (1423-1497) was an Italian mathematician and architect from Florence. ... Although Manetti never himself published his research regarding the topic, the earliest Renaissance Florentine editors of the poem, Cristoforo Landino and Girolamo Benivieni, reported the results of his researches in their respective editions of the Divine Comedy.
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    Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

    Born twenty-three years into his parents' marriage, Giovanni had two much older brothers, both of whom outlived him: Count Galeotto I (1442–1499) continued the dynasty, while Antonio (1444–1501) became a general in the Imperial army. ... During a brief trip to Florence, he met Angelo Poliziano, the courtly poet Girolamo Benivieni, and probably the young Dominican monk Girolamo Savonarola.
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    Italian literature

    We have already stated that Antonio Pucci versified Villani's Chronicle. ... Belcari and Girolamo Benivieni returned to the mystic idealism of earlier times.

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Antonio Benivieni