Chapter 8

AAlston, Dr.,157Ameius Gulielmus,18Anatomical demonstrations,41-46;method of conducting,57-60;lectures, cost of,45,46;teaching of Reid compared with that of Harvey,232-237;works of Harvey,188Anatomy, early teaching of,39;study of, at Cambridge,13;value of comparative,201Andrewes, Dr.,88,90,91,97,98,104,232Andrich, Dr.,18,27Anecdotes of Eliab Harvey,8;William Harvey,144-145;Sir Charles Scarborough,142Appearance of Harvey,52Apothecaries’ opinions of Harvey’s prescriptions,74;visitations of,75-79Aristotle, capillamenta of,213;Harvey’s opinion of,68,72Armorial bearings of the Harvey family,2Art, Harvey an authority on,115Arteries, course of blood in,213Artistarum universitas,16,27Arundel, Earl of,111Aubrey’s first recollection of Harvey,130;Harvey’s advice to,146Auricle, movement of,200Autograph of Harvey in de Glarges’ album,123Aveling, Dr.,83Aylesford, Earls of, their relationship to Harvey,7BBacon and Harvey,71Barber Surgeons Company, abortive attempt to found a surgical lectureship,46;anatomical teaching at,39,40-44,57-60;Reid’s lectures at,47,231;Dr. Scarborough’s lectures at,142Barnacle goose, account of,93,noteBartholomew’s Hospital,seeSt. Bartholomew’s HospitalBass rock, description of,93Bathurst, George,130Bethune, Dr.,83,118Birthplace of William Harvey,4Bleeding, proof of the circulation from the operation of,214,216Blood, circulation of, as described in Lumleian lectures,65Blood, quantity of,208Brent, Sir Nathaniel,134,138,139Breviarium Bartholomei,215Broderield, the,11Browne, Dr. Lancelot,29Burmarsh, Harvey’s estate at,163Butchers proof of the circulation,210CCaius College, Cambridge, Harvey entered at,12Caius, Dr.,13,15Caldwall, Dr.,46,47,48Calidum innatum,192,255Cambridge, anatomy at,13;graduation of Harvey at,14,27;Harvey matriculated at,12,21Canons, Harvey’s lecture,62-64Capillamenta of Aristotle,213Cassowary, Harvey’s account of,239Censors of the College of Physicians, their duties,75,76Centennial eggs,240Cesalpino,213,217Chambers, Dr.,83Charge of the Physician at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital,35Charles I., escape of, from Oxford,138;Harvey appointed physician to,70;Harvey’s friendship with,240-246;interest of, in the pursuits of Harvey,240-46Chick heard in shell,198,251;reasons for the escape of from the egg,250-254“Christianismi Restitutio,”207Circulation of the blood, account of,199-202;anatomical proof of,206,219;butcher’s proof of,210;comparative anatomy of,222;deduced from syncope,210,218;disquisition to Riolanus on,224;formulation of theory of,206;Harvey’s account of,190;Harvey’s propositions about,207;mathematical proof of,208;proof of,206;proof of from amount of milk secreted,211;proof by demonstration,221,67;by continuous flow in,217;mathematical,208;from phlebotomy,214,216;from surgical operation,214;theory of enunciated in Lumleian lectures,65Circulator, meaning of term,74Civil war,117-140Clarke, John, Dr.,104Clavis Mathematica,161Cold blooded animals, heart’s movements in,195College of Physicians, anatomical teaching in,39;attend the funeral of Harvey,167;Harvey admitted a member,29;admitted a Fellow,31;Harvey’s bequests to,163,182;Harvey’s gifts to,154-156;Harvey elected censor,75;erect a statue to Harvey,155;Harvey’s pointer at,57,note;Harvey portraits at,10;leave of absence granted to Harvey,81;library rules,86;Lumleian lectures at,45-50;offices held by Harvey,51,75,80,157,158;portraits of the Harvey family at,10;sites of,50,51;tanned skin presented to,103;translation of Harvey’s remains by,173Columbus Realdus,207Combe, near Croydon,7Comparative anatomy of the circulation,222;destruction of Harvey’s notes on,125,262;value of,202Concilarius, duties of,16;Harvey elected at Padua,18Cookæus, Joh.,17Contemporary estimate of Harvey,225Court physician,70Criticism, contemporary of Harvey,225Croydon,7Cusa, Cardinal Nicholas de,215,noteCusanus,215,noteDDarcy, Sir Robert, the case of,228Darwin, Prof. George,19,20Davies, Dr.,51Death mask of Harvey,167,175Demonstration, anatomical method of conducting,57-61;of Anatomy,42-47;of the circulation,221Derby, Dr. Harvey at,126Destruction of Harvey’s papers,125,262Development, treatise on,89,238-263;introduction to,147-154Diastole, meaning of the term,193,noteDiploma, of Harvey,26Dunne, William,51EEccentricities of Harvey,144,145Edgehill, Harvey at,126Eggs, centennial,240Elect, Harvey chosen,80;duties of,80English nation at Padua,18Ent, Dr.,182;account of Harvey,146-153;meets Harvey at Rome,115Epitaph of Joan Harvey,5Estey, George,11Euclid, Scarborough the first English editor of,139FFabricius Hieronymus,15,23,219;lectures of,23;honours paid to,23;relation of to Harvey,25,240,249-254;theatre of,23Fainting, assigned cause of,214;proof of circulation deduced from,211,218Ferraris, Prof. Carlo,18,19Finch, Sir H.,7Floyer, Sir John,215,noteFolkestone,3,5,11Footman, the King’s,5Forster, Richard,51Fracastorius’ opinion of the heart’s movement,193France, Harvey in,84GGeneration, account of treatise on,238-263;introduction to,147-154;treatise on,89Gerarde’s “Herbal” quoted,93,noteGermany, Harvey’s travels in,123Girardi, Dr.,18Glarges, Philip de,123Glove, Harvey’s experiment with,196Gonville Hall,13Goose, solan or barnacle account of,93,noteGurgany, John,137Guestling, the,12HHalke, Joane,3Halke, Thomas,3Hamey, Dr.,157Harvey, Amye,9Harvey, Aubrey’s description of William,52Harvey, mortuary chapel, the,8,168Harvey, Daniel,6,143Harvey, Eliab,7,38,143,166,168,177,182Harvey, Sir Eliab,G.C.B., anecdote of,8Harvey, Elizabeth,29-31Harvey, Joan,3-5Harvey, John,5,30,33,141Harvey, Matthew,9,141Harvey, Michael,9,141Harvey, Mrs.,29-31,141Harvey, Sarah,5Harvey, Thomas,3-5,6,11,29Harvey, Walter,1Harvey, Dr. William, advice to Aubrey,146;anatomical teaching compared with that of Reid,231-237;anatomical works of,188-237;an art collector,115;and Hofmann,113;and Sir Charles Scarborough,109,139,140,142;and the Civil War,117-140;and the English school of Anatomy,134;and Willoughby,126;anecdotes of,144-146;apothecaries’ opinion of,74;appearance of,52;armorial bearings of,2;as a literary man,159;at Cambridge,12,27;at Padua,14-27;at Padua, elected councillor,19Harvey, Dr. William, at College of Physicians, censor,75;demonstrator’s rod at,57,note;Elect,80;elected candidate,29;elected Fellow,31;elected Concilarius,158;elected President,157;leave of absence granted to,82;Lumleian lecturer,51;Lumleian lectures, notes of,53-56,62-69;rules for library drawn up by,87;Tabulæ Harveianæ,68;Treasurer,80Harvey, William, Dr., at Court, accompanies King to Scotland,92;Physician in Ordinary to King Charles I.,70,87-88;relation to the King,89;Physician Extraordinary to King James I.,70;Senior Physician in Ordinary,118;at Oxford,126-140;Letters to Prince Rupert,130,131Harvey, Dr. William, at Ratisbon,115;at Rome,115;at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, elected physician in reversion,32;last payment to,132,133;retirement from,132,133;leave of absence granted to,82;physician to,34-38;rules for the government of,96;stipend as physician,38;substitute appointed for,90;at Trinity College, Oxford,130;attends Prince Maurice,131;autograph in de Glarges’ album,123;autopsy on old Parr,111;birthplace of,4;builds library and museum at College of Physicians,154-157;burial of,167;candidate at the College of Physicians,29;compared with John Hunter,184-187;complains of old age,159;contemporary criticism of,225;estimate of,184-187;death of,166;death mask of,167,175;debt to Fabricius,24,25;demonstrator’s rod at the College of Physicians,57,note;destruction of his manuscripts,124,262;diploma of,26;dissections by,66;early life of,11-13;eccentricities of,144,145,146;elected consiliarius at Padua,18;elected President of College of Physicians,157;elected Warden of Merton,135;Ent’s account of,146-157;entries concerning, at Padua,18,27;eulogy of,184-187;experiments on himself,255;Fellow of the College of Physicians,31;friendship of Charles I. with,240-247;graduates M.D., at Cambridge,27;at Oxford,130;at Padua,26;Howell’s letter to,160;humour of,30,64,68,69;ill practice by,110;in London,28,31;jargon used by,56;knowledge of Latin,14,18;Lancashire witches,104-109;later years of,141;lecture canons of,62-64;letters to Prince Rupert,130,131;liberality of,24,38,86,154;lineage of,1;love for Virgil,54;marriage of,29;meets Dr. Ent at Rome,115;midwifery, practical knowledge of, possessed by,110;muscular lecture,67;mystical side of,255;notes of muscular lecture,67-69;notes of visceral lecture,53-56;opinion of Aristotle,68;pathological knowledge of,228;pathological observations of,228,246;peculiarities of,144,145,146;personal appearance of,52;physiological advances since the time of,237,238;pillage of his lodgings,124,262;powers of observation of,247-254;practice of,71-75;probate of will of,184;publication of his work, “De motu sanguinis,”73;religion of,55,187;256-260;remains, treatment of,170-175;rules drawn up by,87;treatise on development by,238-242;estimate of treatise on Generation,261;


Back to IndexNext