Antoine Fizes - Opera medica. De tumoribus, suppuratione,
Are you interested in this item?This item is up for auction at Catawiki. Please click on "respond to advert" (orange button) to get redirected to the Catawiki website. Catawiki’s goal is to make special objects universally available. Our weekly auctions feature thousands of unusual, rare, and exceptional objects you won’t find in just any store. Opera medica. De tumoribus, suppuratione, cataracta^, humani corporis partibus solidis, hominis liene sano, ac secretione bilis. His accessit de hominis generatione exercitatio, digesta, concinnata, latinitate donata a Nicolao Fizes, Regis consiliario, in facultate juris Monspeliensi, matheseos professore regio antesignano, juris utriusque doctore, causarum patrono, auctoris patre.Quarto, [ pages. Contemporary calf, with head of spine worn.Antoine Fizes () was professor of medicine in Montpellier. He also taught mathematics and chemistry, with which he had been acquainted in Paris with Nicolas Lemery. This penchant for science made him a somewhat exaggerated advocate of iatro-mathematical and iatromechanical theories. He is known in literary history for having among his patients Rousseau, who came to Montpellier to be treated for a so-called polyp in the heart. What is called ‘Opera Medic’a is a collection of theses.For each of them, the students’ names are known except for the first, perhaps by Fizes himself. These students are: Bernard de Jussieu (); Pierre Rocques (); Jean-François Valadon (); Pierre Brocars (); and Pierre Laulanie ().Covers tumors, abscesses, cataracts, human body parts, the spleen, and secretions of bile, fevers and generation. Read more