About
In early modern medicine and Galenic physiology, the primary organ of sanguification and the seat of the natural spirit and the 'concupiscible' soul. It was considered the source of the veins and the producer of the four humors, particularly yellow bile.
Connections
Other entities that appear in the same books as Liver.
Appears in 95 Books
Niccolò Massa
Paracelsus
Andreas Vesalius
Pietro d'Abano
Rene Descartes
Condé, Johannes Baptista de
Fludd, Robert
Comitibus, Ludovicus de
Hildegard of Bingen
Condé, Johannes Baptista de
Comitibus, Ludovicus de
Virdung von Hasfurt, Johann
Pierleone da Spoleto / Gilles de Corbeil
Various Authors
Realdo Colombo
Niccolò Leoniceno (translator); Galen
Ibn Zuhr (Avenzoar); Averroes (Ibn Rushd)
Giovanni Alfonso Borelli
René Descartes
Paul of Aegina
Andrea Cesalpino
Realdo Colombo
Gabriele Falloppio
Avicenna; Gerard of Cremona
Fludd, Robert
Galen; Karl Gottlob Kühn (ed.)
Johann Vesling
Giovanni Alfonso Borelli
Avicenna (Ibn Sina)
Nicolaus Steno
Bartolomeo Eustachi
Gabriele Falloppio
Constantinus Africanus
Various (Hippocrates, Galen, Caelius Aurelianus, Gargilius Martialis)
Iamblichus; Proclus; Porphyry; trans. Marsilio Ficino
Various (Johannitius, Galen, Hippocrates, Philaretus, Theophilus)
Hippocrates
Galen; Hippocrates
William Harvey
Galen; Georg Helmreich
Abu Bakr al-Razi (Rhazes)
Hippocrates
C.V.M.; George Erskine
Avicenna (Ibn Sina)
Andrea Cesalpino
Bartolomeo Eustachio
Bartolomeo Eustachi
Zwinger, Theodor
Niccolò Leoniceno (translator); Galen
Erastus, Thomas
Albertus Magnus
Jacopo Zabarella
Galen; Karl Gottlob Kühn (ed.)
Galen; Karl Gottlob Kühn (ed.)
Johann Vesling
Constantinus Africanus
Abu Bakr al-Razi (Rhazes)
Various (Galen, Hippocrates, et al.)
Hippocrates
Ibn Zuhr (Avenzoar); Averroes (Ibn Rushd)