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Historical Bibliography Updated: February 25, 2018

Engravings, explaining the anatomy of the bones, muscles and joints.

Publication Details

Edinburgh: John Patterson for Bell & Bradfute, 1794 CE.

Bell’s atlas of the bones, muscles and joints was issued as a separate work a year after his text, The Anatomy of the Bones, Muscles, and Joints. Bell’s illustrations are some of the most striking in the entire literature. “Certainly they have the immediacy of drawings made in the dissecting rooms of late Georgian Edinburgh. Some are quite gruesome and even perverted . . . In their context, however, they are admirable, for they were intended to be used to supplement the teacher’s demonstrations, to remind the student of what he had seen, and to be a guide when the student sat down with the prosected material. It was under the Bells . . . that the extramural schools brought the aspiring surgeon much closer to the cadaver, allowing the student opportunities for actual dissection” (Roberts & Tomlinson, The Fabric of the Body [1992] 491).

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#9833
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/12021
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLengravings-explaining-the-anatomy-of-the-bones-muscles-and-joints

Geographic Context

Publication place: Edinburgh