Wikinventia — Atlas of discoveries and inventions · Middle Age

Epitome of Medicine — Paul of Aegina

~650 AD · Transmission: Global
MedicineTreatiseByzantine

Considered the last great Greek medical compiler, Paul of Aegina wrote a seven-book compendium containing antiquity's most advanced surgical treatise: describing tracheotomies, hernia surgery, tonsillectomy, and fracture reduction in detail. His sixth surgical book was the direct basis for Arab physician Al-Zahrawi's (Abulcasis) medieval Islamic surgery.

Historical regionAegina / Alexandria (Eastern Roman Empire)
Primary sourcePaul of Aegina — Epitome medicae libri septem, c. mid-late 7th century
Secondary sourceAdams, F. (trans.) — The Seven Books of Paulus Aegineta (Sydenham Society, 1844-1847)
Original languageGreek
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