Giulio Cesare Casseri

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Giulio Casserio. Line engraving, 1688. Wellcome V0001025.jpg

Giulio Cesare Casseri (1552 – 8 March 1616), also written as Giulio Casser, Giulio Casserio of Piacenza or Latinized as Iulius Casserius Placentinus, Giulio Casserio, was an Italian anatomist. He is best known for the books Tabulae anatomicae (1627) and De Vocis Auditusque Organis (c. 1600). He was the first to describe the Circle of Willis.

Biography[]

Born in Piacenza, he moved to Padua as a young man, when he became a servant to the great anatomist Hieronymus Fabricius. He studied at the School of Medicine of the Universit™ Artista where his teachers included Girolamo Mercuriale, who was Chair of Clinical Medicine in Padua from 1580-87. Casseri fell out with Fabricius, initially it seems as Fabricius resented the enthusiasm of the students for Casseri's teaching when Fabricius was ill.[1][2][3]

He wrote Tabulae anatomicae, probably the most important anatomical treatise in the seventeenth century, published in Venice, in 1627. The book contained 97 copper-engraved pictures, by Francesco Valesio, inspired by Odiardo Fialetti, Italian painter and former student at Titian's school. The pictures in this book were copied in the works of his successor at Padua, Adriaan van den Spiegel (1578–1625). His De vocis auditusque organis historia anatomica was published in 1600-1 in Ferrara. In this work, he was the first to illustrate the use of tymbals in the production of sound by cicadas.[4] He died in Padua.[1]

The historian of comparative anatomy, F. J. Cole considered Casserius as one of the oldest exponents of comparative anatomy by examining and illustrating anatomical analogues of man in other animals.[5] He described the arterial circle of the brain 37 years before the work of Thomas Willis after whom is named the Circle of Willis.[6][7][8]

Related eponyms[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Riva, Alessandro; Orrù, Beniamino; Pirino, Alessio; Riva, Francesca Testa (2001). "Iulius Casserius (1552-1616): The self-made anatomist of Padua's golden age: Historical Note". The Anatomical Record. 265 (4): 168–175. doi:10.1002/ar.1151. PMID 11519018.
  2. ^ Housman, Brian; Bellary, Sharath; Hansra, Simrat; Mortazavi, Martin; Tubbs, R. Shane; Loukas, Marios (2014). "Giulio cesare casseri (c. 1552-1616): The servant who became an anatomist: Giulio Cesare Casseri" (PDF). Clinical Anatomy. 27 (5): 675–680. doi:10.1002/ca.22261. PMID 23959927. S2CID 13856970.
  3. ^ de Divitiis, Enrico (2013). "Echoes from the Anatomic Theatre of Padua: Casserius and Fabricius Antagonism". World Neurosurgery. 79 (5): 669–672. doi:10.1016/j.wneu.2012.01.011. ISSN 1878-8750. PMID 22360866.
  4. ^ Wessel, Andreas (2013). "Historical Sketch. Casserius and the secret of the cicada's voice". Dtsch. Entomol. Z. 60 (2): 135–146. doi:10.1002/mmnd.201300019 (inactive 2021-05-06).CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of May 2021 (link)
  5. ^ Cole, F. J. (1944). A history of comparative anatomy from Aristotle to the eighteenth century. London: Macmillan.
  6. ^ Paraskevas, G.; Koutsouflianiotis, K.; Iliou, K.; Noussios, G. (2019). "Iulius Casserius, a relatively underestimated anatomist: his contributions to brain's anatomy". Child's Nervous System. 35 (12): 2243–2248. doi:10.1007/s00381-019-04104-4. ISSN 0256-7040. PMID 30850866.
  7. ^ Bender, Matthew; Olivi, Alessandro; Tamargo, Rafael J. (2013). "Iulius Casserius and the First Anatomically Correct Depiction of the Circulus Arteriosus Cerebri (of Willis)". World Neurosurgery. 79 (5–6): 791–797. doi:10.1016/j.wneu.2011.10.044. PMID 22120555.
  8. ^ Wysocki, Michał; Saganiak, Karolina; Zwinczewska, Helena; Roy, Joyeeta; Tomaszewski, Krzysztof A.; Walocha, Jerzy A. (2016). "Iulius Casserius: revolutionary anatomist, teacher and pioneer of the sixteenth and seventeenth century". Anatomical Science International. 91 (3): 217–225. doi:10.1007/s12565-016-0326-1. ISSN 1447-6959. PMID 26783080. S2CID 7578683.

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External links[]

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