306 



Index. 



80-82 ; discovery of new, by Peyer, 

 162 



Glauber's salt, 148 



Glisson, Francis, sketch of the mor- 

 phological constitution of the animal 

 body, 85, 86; on the liver, 111, 112; 

 birth and education : Fellow of 

 Gonville and Caius College; ap- 

 pointed Regius Professor of Physic; 

 Fellow of the Koyal College of 

 Physicians, 287 ; at work in London 

 during the Plague, 288; his Trac- 

 tatus de natura substantia energetica, 

 288, 289; on the liver, 289; the 

 stomach, 289, 290 



Graaf, Regner de, birth; studies under 

 Sylvius at Leyden ; practises at 

 Delft; dies there, 153; on pancreatic 

 juice, 154-157 



Grew, Nehemiah, ' the Anatomy of 

 Vegetables begun,' 92 



Guinterius, Joh., Vesalius a pupil 

 of, 7 



Giinther, Joh., v. Guinterius, Joh. 



Hales, Stephen, birth, education, and 

 death; makes the acquaintance of 

 Horace Walpole, 231 ; ' Statical 

 Essays' of, 231, 232 



Haller, Albrecht von, publication of 

 Vol. i. of his Elementa Physiologice; 

 birth and education, 205; accepts 

 the Chair of Anatomy, Botany, 

 and Medicine at Gottingen ; retires 

 to Bern; completes his Elementa; 

 death, 206; his exposition of diges- 

 tion, 207, 208; bile, 208, 209; on 

 the pancreas, 209; on respiration, 

 228-230; on nervous action, 291- 

 297 ; on the ' seat of the soul, ' 

 297-299 



Harvey, William, birth; at Cambridge; 

 leaves England for Padua, 41 ; degree 

 at Padua; return to England; in 

 London; Physician to St Bartho- 

 Jomew's Hospital ; Physician to King 

 Charles I. ; in charge of the Princes 

 at the battle of Edgehill; retires 



into private life; publishes the De 

 generatione animalium ; death, 42 ; 

 on the circulation of the blood, 42- 

 48, 52-54 ; on the lacteal veins dis- 

 covered by Aselli, 52; the credit of 

 his work claimed for others, 53 ; his 

 method strictly physiological, 55 



Hassenfratz, on the combination of 

 oxygen with the carbon and hydro- 

 gen of the blood, 252 



Heat, 248 



Helmont, J. B. van, birth; studies 

 at Louvain, 128; refuses the M.A. 

 degree ; takes his Doctorship of 

 Medicine ; travels ; his return 

 and marriage ; life and death at 

 Vilvorde, 129 ; the Ortus Medicince 

 of; De magnetica vulnerum cura- 

 tione, 130; influence of Para- 

 celsus on him; comparison of the 

 two intellects, 131; Gas and Bias, 

 terms used by him, 131-136; the 

 six digestions of, 136-141 ; the sen- 

 sitive and motive soul of, 260 



Herbst, J., v. Oporinus, J. 



Hippocrates, 4, 229 



Histology, 94 



Hofmann, J. M., claims the discovery 

 of the duct of the pancreas, 104 



Hohenheim, Theophrastus von, v. 

 Paracelsus 



Hooke, Robert, new ideas started by, 

 under the use of the microscope, 86 ; 

 birth and death of; curator of ex- 

 periments to the Royal Society ; the 

 Micrographia of, 180; experiment 

 on artificial respiration, 180, 181 



Horn, van, on the discovery of the 

 thoracic duct, 50, 51 



Hunter, John, on digestion, 220-223; 

 accuses Reaumur of 'anatomical 

 ignorance'; criticizes Spallanzani ; 

 the latter's reply, 220 



Hydrocarbonous fluid, 252, 253 



Hydrogen, 250, 251 



Ingrassias, John Philipp, the stapes 

 first observed and described by ; 



