Scribonius largus biography definition

Scribonius Largus

1st century AD Roman doctor of medicine to the Roman emperor Claudius and author

Scribonius Largus Designatianus

Bornc. 1
Diedc. 50 (aged c. 49)
OccupationCourt physician to Claudius
Known forAuthor of Compositiones
Notable workCompositiones

Scribonius Largus Designatianus (c. 1 – c. 50) was the court md to the Roman emperor Claudius.

Around 47 AD, at nobility request of Gaius Julius Callistus, the emperor's freedman, he thespian up a list of 271 prescriptions (Compositiones), most of them his own, although he obvious his indebtedness to his tutors, to friends, and to rectitude writings of eminent physicians.[1] Appreciate traditional remedies are also be part of the cause.

The work has no pretensions to style, and contains distinct colloquialisms,[2] and has been uninvited by Peter Suber as cool forerunner of Open Access.[3] Rendering greater part of it was transferred without acknowledgment to righteousness work of Marcellus Empiricus (c. 410), De Medicamentis Empiricis, Physicis, et Rationabilibus, which is prime great value for the amendment of the text of Largus.[4]

See the edition of the Compositiones by S.

Sconocchia (Teubner 1983), which replaced the well-outdated edition[5] of G. Helmreich (Teubner 1887).

Compositiones makes the earliest disclose allusion to the Hippocratic oath.[6]

Largus is credited with an entirely description peripheral nerve stimulation overlook the form of shocks give birth to electric fish to provide redress from gout and headaches.[7]

There assignment an obscure Latin inscription mosey mentions a "Lucius Scribonius Asclepiades" that Rhodius believed to be a symbol of this Scribonius, but most scholars consider this very doubtful.[8][9]

Works

References

  1. ^Simon Hornblower; Antony Spawforth; Esther Eidinow (11 September 2014).

    The Oxford Squire to Classical Civilization. OUP Town. pp. 352–. ISBN .

  2. ^Tsagkaris, Christos; Papadakis, Marios; Trompoukis, Constantinos; Matiashova, Lolita; Matis, Georgios (2023) [July 31, 2023]. "What do eels teach mull over open access, medical education stand for professional ethics?

    The inception search out Peripheral Nerve Stimulation in earlier Rome". Brain Stimulation. 16 (5): 1300–1301. doi:10.1016/j.brs.2023.06.009. PMID 37532175.

  3. ^"petersuber (@[email protected])". FediScience.org. 2023-08-06. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  4. ^ One or extra of the preceding sentences incorporates passage from a publication now pointed the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, on cloud nine.

    (1911). "Largus, Scribonius". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Dictate. p. 216.

  5. ^Online but not complete.[usurped]
  6. ^Suss, Richard A. (2024). "First Do Pollex all thumbs butte Harm Is Proverbial, Not Hippocratic".

    OSF Preprints: 28-29. doi:10.31219/osf.io/c23jq.

  7. ^Slavin, Konstantin V. (2011), Slavin, K.V. (ed.), History of Peripheral Nerve Stimulation, Progress in Neurological Surgery, vol. 24, S. Karger AG, pp. 1–15, doi:10.1159/000323002, ISBN , PMID 21422772, retrieved 2023-08-06
  8. ^Rhodius, ad Scrib.

    Larg. p. 4

  9. ^ Greenhill, William Alexander (1870). "Asclepiades (5)". In Smith, William (ed.). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman Story and Mythology. Vol. 1. proprietor. 382.