Introduction to the Renaissance

The Renaissance was a period in history that saw a burst of innovation in science, medicine, and the arts across Europe. The Renaissance period is usually seen as being from the 14th to 17th Century.

New translations of important texts from Ancient Rome and Ancient Greece provided fresh ideas and knowledge that had not previously been available.

 A ward in the Hotel-Dieu, hospital of Paris, during the Renaissance.
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A ward in the Hotel-Dieu, hospital of Paris, during the Renaissance.
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Medicine in the Renaissance

The word renaissance means re-birth. The term was used to describe a period of European history that saw advancements in science and medicine.

The printing press and medicine

An engraving showing a Gutenberg printing press.
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An engraving showing a Gutenberg printing press. Before Johannes Gutenberg's invention, reproducing a book involved copying it by hand.

All across Europe, the printing press was revolutionising access to books.

Before the printing press, access to books and the knowledge they contained was difficult.

Previously, to own a copy of a book involved paying a scribe to create a handmade copy of that book. This was time-consuming and very expensive.

The printing press meant that it was possible to mass-produce copies of books. As a result, access to books, and the knowledge they contained, was easier.

An engraving showing a Gutenberg printing press.
Image caption,
An engraving showing a Gutenberg printing press. Before Johannes Gutenberg's invention, reproducing a book involved copying it by hand.

New translations of old texts

Engraving showing Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī.
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Engraving showing Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī. al-Rāzī became chief physician at Baghdad's hospital.

Some of the books and documents that became easier to access were rare translations of ancients texts. Some had even been translated several times – from ancient Greek into Arabic by Islamic scholars, and then again from Arabic into Latin.

New translations of important ancient medical texts by doctors such as Hippocrates, Galen, and Islamic scholars such as Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī soon became easier to get hold of.

Some of these old texts provided ideas about the working of the human body and methods of diagnosing illness that were new to European doctors.

More than this, though, it became easier for doctors to read these ancient texts and to test and question Galen’s theories by conducting their own investigations into the human body.

Engraving showing Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī.
Image caption,
Engraving showing Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī. al-Rāzī became chief physician at Baghdad's hospital.
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What did Renaissance doctors know about anatomy?

Much of what Renaissance doctors knew about the workings of the human body came from a doctor who practiced medicine in ancient Rome called Galen.

Galen's legacy

An anatomical study by Leonardo da Vinci.
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An anatomical study of a human body by Leonardo da Vinci.

Galen had read the works of the ancient Greeks, such as Hippocrates, and had learned from this.

He was forbidden to dissect human bodies by the Church since it was believed that the body was a vessel for the human soul.

Instead, Galen learned about anatomy by dissecting animals similar to humans such as apes.

Galen updated and added to the medical knowledge of the ancient Greek doctors and he documented what he discovered.

Galen’s teachings became standard medical practice during the whole of the Middle Ages. They were only challenged and improved upon when a new generation of Renaissance doctors were allowed to dissect human bodies.

An anatomical study by Leonardo da Vinci.
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An anatomical study of a human body by Leonardo da Vinci.

Andreas Vesalius

Andreas Vesalius, 1514 - 1564, was the author of influential anatomy book The Fabric of the Human Body.
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Andreas Vesalius, 1514 - 1564, was the author of influential anatomy book The Fabric of the Human Body.

By the mid 1500s, the dissection of human bodies had been allowed in very limited circumstances. This directly led to advancements in the study of anatomy.

In 1543, Andreas Vesalius published The Fabric of the Human Body in which he presented high quality and accurate anatomical illustrations of the human body.

The book built on the work of Galen and corrected many of his misunderstandings.

Versalius’s work inspired doctors across Europe, encouraging them to perform their own dissections and anatomical procedures for themselves.

Vesalius’s work corrected theories which had been held since the time of Galen.

Andreas Vesalius, 1514 - 1564, was the author of influential anatomy book The Fabric of the Human Body.
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Andreas Vesalius, 1514 - 1564, was the author of influential anatomy book The Fabric of the Human Body.

What did Versalius discover?

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Circulation of blood

Diagram from ‘De Motu Cordis set Sanguinis in Animalibus’ (The Motion of the Heart and Blood in Living Beings) by William Harvey  1628. The diagram demonstrates the existence of one-way valves in veins.
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Diagram from ‘De Motu Cordis set Sanguinis in Animalibus’ (The Motion of the Heart and Blood in Living Beings) by William Harvey 1628. The diagram demonstrates the existence of one-way valves in veins.

Before the Renaissance, many people (influenced by Galen) believed that new blood was produced in the liver and replaced blood that had been burned up in the body.

They also believed that veins carried blood and air round the body and that blood was passed from one side of the heart to the other through invisible holes.

An English doctor called William Harvey ended Galen’s influence over anatomy.

Harvey had been the doctor of both King James VI of Scotland and I of England and Charles I, In 1628 he publishedAn Anatomical Exercise on the Motion of the Heart and Blood.

Through his experiments, Harvey was able to prove that the heart was a pump that moved blood around the body. Harvey dissected live, cold-blooded animals (as their hearts beat slower than mammals) to see the movement of the heart’s muscles.

By attempting (and failing) to pump liquid through veins, Harvey was able to prove that blood was pumped along a one way system around the body.

Diagram from ‘De Motu Cordis set Sanguinis in Animalibus’ (The Motion of the Heart and Blood in Living Beings) by William Harvey  1628. The diagram demonstrates the existence of one-way valves in veins.
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Diagram from ‘De Motu Cordis set Sanguinis in Animalibus’ (The Motion of the Heart and Blood in Living Beings) by William Harvey 1628. The diagram demonstrates the existence of one-way valves in veins.
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Developments in surgery during the Renaissance

An illustration showing French surgeon, Ambroise Paré, operating on a battlefield.
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An illustration showing French surgeon, Ambroise Paré, operating on a battlefield.

Many advancements in surgery were discovered on battlefields by through trial and error.

During this period, when a patient had a limb surgically removed, arteries and open wounds were sealed by burning them. This process was called cauterisation. It was extremely painful and traumatic for the patient.

Ambroise Paré was a French barber surgeon who used as ligatures to tie off the arteries during amputations rather than cauterising them.

Whilst this was certainly less painful, it did not stop large numbers of Paré's patients dying after surgery.

Very little was known about germs and the surgeons' dirty hands and equipment often caused infections in the wounds being treated. It was these infections rather than the original wounds that killed many of the patients.

An illustration showing French surgeon, Ambroise Paré, operating on a battlefield.
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An illustration showing French surgeon, Ambroise Paré, operating on a battlefield.
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Patient care during the Renaissance

A portrait of Thomas Sydenham, 1624 - 1689. Hi book, Observationes Medicae, was used by doctors for two hundred years.
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A portrait of Thomas Sydenham, 1624 - 1689. Hi book, Observationes Medicae, was used by doctors for two hundred years.

Thomas Sydenham is often referred to as ‘The English Hippocrates’ (due to his practice of observing his patients) and a pioneer in diagnostics.

He believed that each disease was different and that in order to correctly cure the disease, it must first be diagnosed correctly. This may sound like common sense to us but it was revolutionary at the time!

Sydenham thought it was important to visit the patient, taking a full patient history and making observations. He argued that this was the only way to ensure that the correct diagnosis was made.

Instead of trying to cure imbalances in the human body, through treatments like blood letting, Sydenham often worked to treat symptoms, providing the body a chance to recover on its own:

  • He used cooling treatment on patients with smallpox and fevers
  • He used laudanum as a painkiller and treatment for fever
  • He treated malaria with cinchona bark. The bark contains quinine, a chemical compound that can prevent the parasite that causes malaria from reproducing.

Through his careful observations, Sydenham was able to collate a number of detailed descriptions of illnesses, including the first description of .

A portrait of Thomas Sydenham, 1624 - 1689. Hi book, Observationes Medicae, was used by doctors for two hundred years.
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A portrait of Thomas Sydenham, 1624 - 1689. Hi book, Observationes Medicae, was used by doctors for two hundred years.
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Teaching during the Renaissance

Robert Hooke's compound microscope of 1665. Hooke was the first person to document microorganisms through his observations using microscopes.
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Robert Hooke's compound microscope of 1665. Hooke was the first person to document microorganisms through his observations using microscopes.

As well as scientific discoveries, the Renaissance brought about new methods of training new doctors.

Alongside being taught the works of Vesalius and Harvey, students in Edinburgh and London were expected to learn ‘on the job’ on the wards of the hospitals.

Medical students and doctors were also encouraged to dissect bodies to further their own knowledge and were able to use new equipment such as microscopes and thermometers to develop theories.

Robert Hooke's compound microscope of 1665. Hooke was the first person to document microorganisms through his observations using microscopes.
Image caption,
Robert Hooke's compound microscope of 1665. Hooke was the first person to document microorganisms through his observations using microscopes.

A royal interest in science

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Renaissance limitations

Breathing a Vein, by James Gillray, 1804. Gillray's cartoon shows a doctor drawing blood from a patient's vein in the belief that it will restore balance to his body systems.
Image caption,
Breathing a Vein, by James Gillray, 1804. Gillray's cartoon shows a doctor drawing blood from a patient's vein in the belief that it will restore balance to his body systems.

Despite the Renaissance period bringing many ground-breaking discoveries, not all of these were immediately accepted.

  • People like Harvey, Sydenham made advances in treating illness but many doctors fought against change and held onto Galen’s theories. It took 50 years for Harvey’s theories regarding the flow of blood to become more accepted than Galen’s, by which point Harvey had died.

  • New medical discoveries were seen to be correct but doctors lacked the knowledge to undersand why they were correct.

  • Doctors and scientists may have adopted new methods but they were not always able to explain why these methods worked.

  • Harvey had proven that blood transfusions were possible but in practice many blood transfusions failed because people did not know about different blood groups.

  • Sydenham improved understanding of symptoms and types of disease but he refused to investigate the causes of disease and illness use microscopy or other new techniques…

  • New equipment, like the microscope, was used to develop knowledge but these instruments needed further refinement in order to contribute to future advancements in medicine.

  • Using a microscope, Robert Hook was able to identify microorganisms for the first time but the link between microorganisms and disease would not be made until the 1850s.

Despite these limitations, the Renaissance provided the opportunity to break free from outdated theories and inspired many of the advancements in medicine that we take for granted today.

Breathing a Vein, by James Gillray, 1804. Gillray's cartoon shows a doctor drawing blood from a patient's vein in the belief that it will restore balance to his body systems.
Image caption,
Breathing a Vein, by James Gillray, 1804. Gillray's cartoon shows a doctor drawing blood from a patient's vein in the belief that it will restore balance to his body systems.
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