Asclepiades Pharmacion
Asclepiades Pharmacion or Asclepiades Junior (Greek: Ἀσκληπιάδης; fl. 1st–2nd century) was a Greek physician. He is believed to have lived at the end of the 1st or the beginning of the 2nd century AD, as he quotes Andromachus, Dioscorides, and Scribonius Largus,[1] and is himself quoted by Galen. He derived his surname of Pharmacion from his skill and knowledge of pharmacy, on which subject he wrote a work in ten books, five on external remedies, and five on internal.[2] Galen quotes this work very frequently, and generally with approbation.
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De medicina
The encyclopedic arrangement of De Medicina by Aulus Cornelius Celsus follows the tripartite division of medicine established by Hippocrates and Asclepiades — diet, pharmacology, and surgery."[3]
Notes
- Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Locos, vii. 2, x. 2, vol. xiii. pp. 51, 53, 342; De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. vii. 6, vol. xiii. p. 968
- Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. vol. xiii. p. 442
- "On Medicine - De medicina". World Digital Library. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Asclepiades Pharmacion". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
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