This volume collects essays dealing with the history of medicine in
early modern Europe, and ranging from experiments and practices to the
role of erudition in court-medicine, from the study of tarantism and
plagues to the uses of drugs, from the collaborations and dissemination
of medical knowledge to the epistemological classification of diseases.
The essays aim to reveal the boundless investigation in medical
knowledge, ultimately blurring the line of diverse fields, and focus on
the extension of medicine as a scientia. Besides the investigation of
specific figures and several case studies of early modern medicine, the
volume opens with an exploration of the Medical School of Padua and also
deals with some important locations that shape the science of medicine,
such as anatomical theatres, botanical gardens, and museums.