not really people still thought galen was right about atanomy
Andreas Vesalius Andreas VesaliusAndreas Vesalius
Andreas Vesalius was a Renaissance physician. He was the son of Andreas Vesalius, a court apothecary to the Emperor Charles V. His wife was Anne van Hamme. There is no mention of siblings.
the fisrt dissection was recorded in the university of bologna in the year 1315 during the renaissance.
Andreas vesalius of the renaissance period
vesalius
Andreas Vesalius
Developments from the Renaissance, such as humanism and a focus on empirical observation, influenced Andreas Vesalius's work by inspiring him to challenge traditional ideas about human anatomy. Vesalius's meticulous dissections and detailed anatomical illustrations in his groundbreaking work "De humani corporis fabrica" (On the Fabric of the Human Body) marked a significant shift towards more accurate and scientific study of the human body.
Like many other Renaissance physicians and artists, Andreas Vesalius was driven of the human anatomy, Vesalius published the results of his anatomical work in the great treatise appeared in the same year that Copernicus redrew the not to mention the fact that in the manifold and infinite difference between.
This movement was made possible by the Reformation of the Church, a decline in Conservatism, the work of individuals such as Andreas Vesalius and William Harvey and technological advances. All of these took place during the Renaissance period.[2]
Vesalius was from what is now called Belgium.
Andreas Vesalius was born in Brussels in Belgium.
Vesalius College was created in 1987.