Antonio Scarpa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antonio Scarpa (May 9, 1752October 31, 1832) was an Italian anatomist and professor.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Antonio was born to an impoverished family in the village of Motta (Lorenzaga di Motta di Livenza), to the south of Tyrol. An uncle, who was a member of the priesthood, gave him instruction until the age of 15, when he passed the entrance exam for the University of Padua.[1] He was a pupil of Giovanni Battista Morgagni and Marc Antonio Caldani. Under the former, he became doctor of medicine on May 19, 1770; in 1772 he became professor at the University of Modena.

For a time he chose to travel, visiting Holland, France and England. When he returned to Italy, he was made professor of anatomy at the University of Padua, with the strong recommendation of Emperor Joseph II. He was elected to the chair at Padua in 1783, and remained in that post until 1804 when he stepped down to allow his student, Santo Fattori, to assume the chair.[2]

In 1805, Napoleon was made King of Italy. He choose to visit the University of Pavia upon which he inquired as to the whereabouts of Dr. Scarpa. He was informed that the doctor had been dismissed because of his political opinions and his refusal to take oaths. Whereupon Dr. Scarpa was restored to his position as the chair.[3]

During his lifetime he became a rich man, acquiring a collection of valuable paintings and living a wealthy lifestyle. He was a confirmed bachelor, and fathered several sons out of wedlock (whom he favored through nepotism). In his career he earned a reputation for ruthlessness, destroying his enemies and taxing his favorites to their limits.[1] Toward the end of his life, Antonio Scarpa suffered from a stone in his urinary system. This caused an inflammation of his bladder, which resulted in his death. He died in Pavia, October 30,1832.[4] After his death his reputation was bitterly attacked, and even marble stones erected in his memory were defaced.[1]

[edit] Works

Dr. Scarpa published a number of medical treatises that were widely respected.

  • In 1789 he published Anatomicæ disquisitiones de auditu et olfactu, a study of the hearing and olfactory organs, which was soon considered a classical treatise on the subject.[2]
  • He published Tabulae neurologicae[5] in 1794, which was the first work to give an accurate depiction of the Heart's nerves and to show cardiac innervation. It is considered to be his finest work. Apparently Dr. Scarpa locked the engraver in his room until the illustrations were finished.[6]
  • His 1801 work, Saggio di osservazioni e d’esperienze sulle principali malattie degli occhi (A Treatise on the Principal Diseases of the Eyes) described and illustrated the major eye diseases. It was the first opthalmology text published in Italian, but was subsequently published in several languages and earned him the title of "father of Italian ophthalmology".[7]

[edit] Eponyms

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Rutkow, Ira M. (1988). Great Ideas in the History of Surgery. Norman Publishing. ISBN 0930405021. 
  2. ^ a b Richardson, Benjamin Ward (1886). "Antonio Scarpa, F.R.S., and Surgical Anatomy". The Asclepiad 4 (16): 128-157. 
  3. ^ Staff (1833). "Miscellaneous Literary Notes". The Foreign Quarterly Review 11: 252. 
  4. ^ Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (1841). Penny Cyclopaedia, vol. 21. London: C. Knight, 16. 
  5. ^ Full title: Tabulae nevrologicae ad illustrandam historiam cardiacorum nervorum, noni nervorum cerebri, glossopharingei et pharingei.
  6. ^ Acierno, Louis J. (1994). The History of Cardiology: Men, Ideas and. Informa Health Care. ISBN 1850703396. 
  7. ^ Sebastian, Anton (1999). A Dictionary of the History of Medicine. Informa Health Care. ISBN 1850700214. 

[edit] External links


Languages