Kuhn

Front Cover
Karl Gottlob Kühn
Cambridge University Press, May 29, 2011 - Medical - 920 pages
Galen (Claudius Galenus, 129-c. 199 CE) is the most famous physician of the Greco-Roman world whose writings have survived. A Greek from a wealthy family, raised and educated in the Greek city of Pergamon, he acquired his medical education by travelling widely in the Roman world, visiting the famous medical centres and studying with leading doctors. His career took him to Rome, where he was appointed by the emperor Marcus Aurelius as his personal physician; he also served succeeding emperors in this role. A huge corpus of writings on medicine which bear Galen's name has survived. The task of editing and publishing such a corpus, and of identifying the authentic Galenic texts within it, is a hugely challenging one, and the 22-volume edition reissued here, edited by Karl Gottlob Kühn (1754-1840) and published in Leipzig between 1821 and 1833, has never yet been equalled.
 

Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
74
Section 3
143
Section 4
215
Section 5
280
Section 6
340
Section 7
415
Section 8
475
Section 10
589
Section 11
651
Section 12
707
Section 13
732
Section 14
779
Section 15
831
Section 16
857
Section 17
887

Section 9
532

Bibliographic information