talian physician and anatomist whose Anathomia Mundini (MS.
1316; first printed in 1478) was the first European book written since classical
antiquity that was entirely devoted to anatomy and was based on the dissection
of human cadavers. It remained a standard text until the time of the Flemish anatomist
Andreas Vesalius (1514-64).
Mondino received his medical training at the University of Bologna, and after
graduation he studied and taught anatomy and surgery at that university while
actively practicing medicine and surgery. Mondino was the first to reintroduce
the systematic teaching of anatomy into the medical curriculum after this practice
had been abandoned for many centuries. He himself performed dissections at public
lectures. Mondino's Anathomia was written in 1316 and became the standard
handbook for the dissector, going through 39 editions in all. The work followed
the anatomical teachings of Galen slavishly, and its descriptions of internal
organs were sometimes inaccurate, but it inaugurated a new era in the dissemination
of anatomical knowledge.
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