Historical Bibliography Updated: January 13, 2020
Nova et tuta variolas excitandi per transplantationem methodus; nuper inventa & in usum tracta: Qua rite peracta, immunia in posterum praeservantur ab huiusmodi contagio corpora.
Publication Details
Venice: Giovanni Gabriele Hertz, 1715 CE.
Inoculation was practiced in ancient times. In 1701 Pilarino inoculated three children at Constantinople with smallpox virus. He is credited with the “medical” discovery of variolation, and is thus the first immunologist. His book records his many researches on the subject.
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Thematic Classifications
| Catalog Metadata | Reference Information |
|---|---|
| Entry Number | #5409.1 |
| Permanent Link | https://hom-sveltekit.fly.dev/entry/7266 |
| External URL | nova-et-tuta-variolas-excitandi-per-transplantationem-methodus-nuper-inventa-et-in-usum-tracta |
Geographic Context
Publication place: Venice
Mentioned in annotation: Istanbul (Constantinople)