Vol. 116 No. 2 (2011)
Original Article

From conception to birth: ancient library sources of embryology and women anatomy kept in the Biblioteca Biomedica of the Università degli Studi di Firenze (Biomedical Library of Florence University)

Published 2011-11-29

Keywords

  • history of medicine,
  • labor presentation,
  • midwifery

How to Cite

Vannucci, L., Frigenti, L., & Faussone-Pellegrini, M.-S. (2011). From conception to birth: ancient library sources of embryology and women anatomy kept in the Biblioteca Biomedica of the Università degli Studi di Firenze (Biomedical Library of Florence University). Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 116(2), 93–103. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/1097

Abstract

The Biomedical Library of the University of Florence boasts a prestigious group of books collected at first in 1679 at the hospital “Santa Maria Nuova” and then continuously enriched in the course of time up today. The “Antique Collection” consists of 13 incunabola, hundreds of 16th-century books, more than one thousand books on medical subject from the 1600’s, about six thousand 18th-century volumes and several large, valuable anatomical atlases. In this paper the most important, curious and fascinating books dealing with human ontogeny (from embryo generation to birth) and with female anatomy (mostly concerning pregnancy and childbirth) are reported in chronological order starting from the work of Hippocrates. Among the ancient sources useful for the reconstruction of the opinions about obstetrics there are also outstanding handbooks specifically edited for midwives. Many of these antique books are especially precious because they embed a great number of didactic pictures, some of which may compete against any modern book of anatomy, embryology and obstetric. Selected images from these books are shown.