Sir Thomas Browne: physician 1605−1682 and the Religio Medici
Article first published online: 19 JUN 2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1445-2197.2003.t01-1-02646.x
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How to Cite
Mellick, S. (2003), Sir Thomas Browne: physician 1605−1682 and the Religio Medici. ANZ Journal of Surgery, 73: 431–437. doi: 10.1046/j.1445-2197.2003.t01-1-02646.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 19 JUN 2003
- Article first published online: 19 JUN 2003
- Accepted for publication 11 February 2003.
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Keywords:
- anatomy protagonist;
- bibliophile;
- practising physician;
- staunchly religious
Sir Thomas Browne, 1605−1682, a physician of great scholarship, published his Religio Medici in 1642 as an expression of his own religious and professional beliefs. He had studied in Oxford and then turned to medicine and he pursued these studies in the Universities of Montpellier, Padua and Leiden in Europe. Returning to Britain, he completed his medical degree and practised in Norwich for over three decades. He was considered one of the foremost physicians in England, although he did not practise in London, and he was conscious of the need for doctors to have a good knowledge of anatomy at a time when, before anaesthesia, surgery was becoming more adventurous. He was knighted by King Charles II in 1671. The curtailment of anatomy teaching in many undergraduate and postgraduate schools of medicine today would not have appealed to Browne. It is of growing concern to surgical colleges and academies who are now required to provide additional postgraduate anatomy teaching in order to satisfy the requirements of their examinations for surgeons.

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