Archangelo Piccolomini

Archangelo Piccolomini or Arcangelo Piccolomini (1525–1586) was an Italian anatomist and personal physician to a number of popes.

Archangelo Piccolomini
Archangelo Piccolomini
Born1525
DiedOctober 19, 1586(1586-10-19) (aged 60–61)
Resting placeSanta Maria sopra Minerva
NationalityItalian
Alma materUniversity of Ferrara
Known forBeing the first to describe and differentiate the white matter of the cerebrum from the grey matter of the cortex
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine, anatomy
Institutions

Biography

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Archangelo Piccolomini was born in Siena in 1525, and moved to Ferrara, where completed his studies in the field of medicine and philosophy.[1] He went to France in 1550 where he was appointed to the Chair of Philosophy at the University of Bordeaux, and compiled a broad commentary on the treatise of Galen De Humoribus in 1556, dedicating it to the Bishop of Ceneda, Michele Della Torre and apostolic nuncio to Paris.

He was called to Rome by Pope Paul IV in 1557, and became the personal physician to the pope, a position he maintained under successive popes Pius IV and Gregory XIII. From 1575 he taught anatomy at the Sapienza.[2]

In 1586 he published the anatomical treatise Anatomicae praelectiones explicantes mirificam corporis humani fabricam, which he dedicated to Pope Sixtus V, who had just taken office. He was the first to describe and differentiate the white matter of the cerebrum from the grey matter of the cortex. His observations led to the anatomical study of the cortex by Marcello Malphigi and Antonie van Leeuwenhoek.[3][4]

He died later that year in Rome, and was buried in the church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva.

References

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  1. ^ L. Ughi, Dizionario storico degli uomini illustri ferraresi nella pietà, nelle arti, e nelle scienze. Ed. Eredi G. Rinaldi, Ferrara 1804. Pag. 107
  2. ^ Bylebyl 2007.
  3. ^ Schotten, Marco Catani, Michael Thiebaut de (2010). Atlas of human brain connections. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 26–27. ISBN 978-0199541164.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Catani, Marco; Schotten, Michel Thiebaut de (14 June 2012). Atlas of Human Brain Connections. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199541164.
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