
AbstractGalen or Galenus was born at Pergamum (now Bergama in Turkey) in 129 A.D., and died in the year 200 A.D. He was a 2nd century Greek philosopher‐physician who switched to the medical profession after his father dreamt of this calling for his son. Galen's training and experiences brought him to Alexandria and Rome and he rose quickly to fame with public demonstrations of anatomical and surgical skills. He became physician to emperor Marcus Aurelius and the emperor's ambitious son, Commodus. He wrote prodigiously and was able to preserve his medical research in 22 volumes of printed text, representing half of all Greek medical literature that is available to us today. The structures, the great cerebral vein and the communicating branch of the internal laryngeal nerve, bear his eponym. Clin. Anat. 17:454–457, 2004. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Plants, Medicinal, Turkey, Physiology, Dissection, Brain, Cerebral Veins, Nervous System, Mind-Body Relations, Metaphysical, General Surgery, Terminology as Topic, Animals, Humans, Anatomy, History, Ancient
Plants, Medicinal, Turkey, Physiology, Dissection, Brain, Cerebral Veins, Nervous System, Mind-Body Relations, Metaphysical, General Surgery, Terminology as Topic, Animals, Humans, Anatomy, History, Ancient
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