Facets
Browse across eight MeSH (opens in new tab) facets — era, geography, science, specialty, technology, history, culture, and reference. Select one tag per group; counts update across the others.
Clear filtersFacet filters
Geography
Specialties & Disease
- Anatomy & Pathology 15
- Cardiology & Blood 0
- Neurology & Psychiatry 2
- Obstetrics & Reproductive 5
- Infectious Disease (General) 4
- Surgery & Anesthesia 3
- Public Health 37
- Immunology & Dermatology 3
- General Clinical Medicine 2
- Military Medicine 3
- Psychology 0
- Alternative & Fringe Medicine 1
- Pediatrics 1
- Ophthalmology & Vision 0
- ENT & Hearing 0
- Urology & Nephrology 1
- Gastroenterology & Hepatology 1
- Pulmonary & Respiratory 1
- Rheumatology, Rehab & Pain 1
- Internal, Emergency & Geriatric 0
- Veterinary Medicine 0
- Epidemiology & Demography 1
- Physiology & Embryology 1
- Dentistry 1
- Plagues & Epidemics 4
- Microbiology & Virology 3
Social & Historical Studies
Institutions & Culture
Reference & Scholarly Works
Drugs & Technology
1 entries match Europe & United Kingdom [Z01.542] · Urology & Nephrology [C13] · Historiography & General Works [K01.900]
1490 CE
#47
Liber Teisir, sive rectificatio medicationis et regiminis. Antidotarium. Translated from Arabic into Hebrew by Jacobus Hebraeus; into Latin by Paravicius. Add: Averroes: Colliget.
AVENZOAR [IBN ZUHR (ARABIC: ابن زهر ] (1092 – 1162) AVERROËS [IBN RUSHD (ARABIC: ابن رشد), FULL NAME ʾABŪ L-WALĪD MUḤAMMAD IBN ʾAḤMAD IBN RUŠD] (1126 – 1198) PARAVICIUS, [Paravicinus, Patavinus] (1250 – ) JACOBUS HEBRAEUS (1250 – )
This is a Latin translation from a Hebrew version dating from 1280. Avenzoar, the greatest Muslim physician of the Western Caliphate, described the itch-mite, Sarcoptes scabiei, serous pericarditis, mediastinal absces…