Lorenzo Bellini
Lorenzo Bellini | |
---|---|
Lorenzo Bellini | |
Born |
3 September 1643 Florence |
Died |
8 January 1704 (aged 60) Florence |
Nationality | Italian |
Fields | anatomy |
Lorenzo Bellini (3 September 1643 – 8 January 1704), Italian physician and anatomist.
Life
He was born at Florence on the September 3, 1643. At the age of twenty, when he had already begun his researches on the structure of the kidneys and had described the papillary ducts (also known as Bellini's ducts), as published in his book Exercitatio Anatomica de Structura Usu Renum (1662), he was chosen professor of theoretical medicine at Pisa, but soon after was transferred to the chair of anatomy. After spending thirty years at Pisa, he was invited to Florence and appointed physician to the grand duke Cosimo III, and was also made senior consulting physician to Pope Clement XI. He died at Florence on the January 8, 1704. His works were published in a collected form at Venice in 1708.[1]
References
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bellini, Lorenzo". Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Sources
- Fye, W B (February 1997). "Lorenzo Bellini". Clinical Cardiology. 20 (2): 181–2. doi:10.1002/clc.4960200218. PMID 9034650.
- Klass, G M (December 1974). "Bellini's concept of catarrh: an examination of a seventeenth-century iatromechanical viewpoint". Clio medica (Amsterdam, Netherlands). 9 (4): 317–23. PMID 4141293.
- Lilien, O M (May 1971). "Marcello Malpighi (1628–1694) and Lorenzo Bellini (1643–1704)". Investigative urology. 8 (6): 698–9. PMID 4931080.