290 



HUMAN DISSECTION. ITS DRAMA AND STRUGGLE 



University of Michigan, 244 

 University of Vermont, 212 

 in 

 Austria, 111 

 British Isles, 116, 150 

 China, 113 

 England, 153 

 France, 106-107 

 Germany, 109 

 Ireland, 128-133 

 Japan, 113 

 Missouri, 254 

 New England, 185, 197 

 Renaissance, 73 

 Scotland, 179 

 United States 

 (1900-1958), 253 

 factors involved, 271-272 

 variations in distributions, 253 

 of 



Vesalius, 95 

 Warren, John C, 200 

 role of undertakers in, 255 

 transportation of, 125 

 willing of bodies, 256 

 Cadwallader, Thomas, lecturer in anat- 

 omy, Philadelphia, 216 

 Caius, John, (1513-1573) 

 as a teacher, 135 

 at 



Barber-Surgeons Hall, 135 

 Caius College, 135 

 Royal College of Physicians, 135 

 founder of anatomy, England, 134 

 Calvin, John, French theologian, 87 

 Camac. C. N. B., 40 



Carnegie Foundation for the Advance- 

 ment of Teaching, standardization 

 board, 247 

 Carpenter, C. C, 250 

 Carroll, Hermanns, executed criminal 



(1750), 222 

 Cassidy, Patrick, executed criminal 



(1788), 226 

 Caste system, in ancient India, 31 

 Castiglioni, A., 42,43, 110 

 Castleton Medical College (18181861), 

 209-210 



anatomical code (1824), 209 



Hubbardton raid (1830), 210 

 Cave, A. J. E., 38 

 Celebration of death, 16 

 Celsus, 48 



De Medicina, 47 



writings of, 49 

 Cemeteries 



Bully's Acre, Dublin, 129, 131 



graves of paupers, source of cadavers, 

 188 



Potter's Field, origin of term, 116 



private and potter's fields, 122 

 Chapin, W. A. R., 210, 211, 212 

 Chapman, Nathaniel, adversary of Patti- 



son, 227 

 Charles II, and Barber-Surgeons (1663), 



137 

 Charles V of Spain, employer of Vesalius, 



103 

 Chatard, J. A., 43 

 Cheselden, William (1688-1752), surgeon 



and writer, 138 

 China, 267 



availability of cadavers, 113 



medical schools, 1 1 3 



ranking of medicine, 112 



status of 

 dissection, 112, 113 

 legalization of dissection, 42 

 China, ancient 



ancestral worship, 20 



Buddhism, 22, 258 



burial, of living humans, 21 



Confucius, 21, 258 



doctrine of retribution, 22 



early religions of, 20-22 



emperor, as ecclesiastical head, 21 



hells of, 22 



nature worship, 20 



polytheism, 21 



practical aim, of religion, 21 



soul, status of, 20 



tombs, building of, 21 

 Chovet, Abraham, anatomy teacher, 



Philadelphia. 219 

 Christ, 37 



