Skip to main content

History of Forensic Medicine

Exhibiting 24 entries found in the GMN corpus.

YearTitle & TagsAuthor(s)
2004 CECatalog of the Robert L. Sadoff Library of Forensic Psychiatry and Legal Medicine.
1999 CEConduct unbecoming a woman: Medicine on trial in turn-of-the-century Brooklyn.
1968 CECrime and insanity in England. Volume one: The historical perspective. (All published.)
2006 CECriminels and their scientists: The history of criminology in international perspective. Edited by Richard F. Wetzell and Peter Becker.
1993 CEDoctors and the law: Medical jurisprudence in nineteenth-century America.
2014 CEForensic medicine and death investigation in Medieval England.
2006 CEForensic science: An encyclopedia of history, methods and techniques.
1976 CEHighlights in medicolegal relations. Revised & enlarged ed.
1989 CEHomicidal insanity, 1800-1985.
2017 CEImperfect pregnancies: A history of birth defects and prenatal diagnosis.
2004 CELaws of men and laws of nature: The history of scientific expert testimony in England and America.
1994 CELegal medicine in history. Edited by Michael Clark and Catherine Crawford.
2014 CEMedicine and the law in the Middle Ages. Edited by Wendy J. Turner and Sara M. Butler.
2016 CEMurder and the making of English CSI.
2008 CEPaolo Zacchia: alle origini della medicina legale, 1584-1659. Edited by Alessandro Pastore and Giovanni Rossi.
2002 CESexual blackmail: A modern history.
1985 CESurgeons at the Bailey. English forensic medicine to 1878.
2020 CEThe body of evidence. Corpses and proofs in early modern European medicine. Edited by Francesco Paolo de Ceglia.
2012 CEThe doctor dissected: A cultural history of the Burke and Hare murders.
2010 CEThe double helix and the law of evidence.
2005 CEThe elements of murder: A history of poison.
2015 CEThe evolution of forensic psychiatry: History, current developments, future directions. Edited by Robert L. Sadoff.
1968 CEThe trial of the assassin Guiteau: Psychiatry and law in the gilded age.
1995 CEWitnessing insanity. Madness and mad-doctors in the English court.