Heinrich Petraeus

Heinrich Petraeus (Henricus Petraeus) (1589โ€“1620) was a German physician and writer. He was Professor of Medicine at the University of Marburg. He was son-in-law of the chemist Johannes Hartmann (1568โ€“1631). He is known for his Nosologia Harmonica Dogmatica et Hermetica.[1] This was an attempt to find concord between rival medical theories of the time: those of the progressive chemical physicians (exemplified by Vesalius) and those of the tradition-based Galenists.[2]

Portrait. Credit: Wellcome Collection

Notes

  1. Petraeus, Henricus; et al. (1616). Nosologia Harmonica Dogmatica [et] Hermetica: Dissertationibus quinquaginta, etc. OCLC 61965947.
  2. Debus, Allen (1986). "Chemistry and the Universities in the Seventeenth Century" (PDF). Mededelingen van de Koninklijke Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten van Belgie. Klasse der Wetenschappen. 48 (4): 15โ€“33. PMID 12879514.


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