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A History of Military Medicine Vol II: From the Renaissance Through Modern Times
Foreword by John Keegan
Book Code: GHM/02
ISBN: 0-313-28403-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-28403-8
328 pages, figures, illustrations, photographs, tables
Greenwood Press
Publication: 5/30/1992
List Price: $101.95 (UK Sterling Price: £57.95)
Availability: Print on demand
Media Type: Hardcover
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Military Studies
Series Number: 124
  • Endorsement From
    John Keegan


    from the Foreword
    :
    It is this history [of military medicine], so central to that of warfare, that Richard Gabriel and Karen Metz survey in this invaluable book. . . . No one has hitherto attempted . . . a comprehensive treatment of the subject from the earliest times to the present day and from all civilizations. To have written such a study is Gabriel's and Metz's achievement. It will become an automatic source of reference for all military historians, for medical historians interested in the parallel development of military and civil medicine, and for anyone else concerned with this aspect of warfare through the ages.
Description: Richard A. Gabriel and Karen S. Metz have completed this unique two-volume work: the first published comprehensive history of military medicine in the Western world. This second volume begins with the Renaissance, the occasion of the Western rebirth of the empirical habit of inquiry that made possible the eventual development of scientific medicine. The volume continues with studies of the increasingly sophisticated art of military medicine as it developed from the slaughter pens and amputations of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the first effective medical care systems developed in the nineteenth century. The rise of modern military medicine in the twentieth century is then analyzed by Gabriel and Metz up until the close of the Vietnam War. Numerous instances of cross-national transfer of information and practices are reflected in the organization of the second volume, which still does not lose sight of the fact that, until very modern times, the various national efforts at providing military medical care remained essentially unique. Volume II concludes with an overview of the emergence of military medicine, a bibliography, and a general subject index. These volumes will be of considerable use to students and scholars alike in the disciplines of world history, military studies, and medical history. It is hoped that the Gabriel-Metz undertaking will stimulate an intensive re-examination of the course of military medical history.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Development of Modern War, 1453 to the Twentieth Century
  • The Renaissance: Rebirth of the Empirical Spirit
  • The Seventeenth Century: Gunpowder and Slaughter
  • The Eighteenth Century: The First Effective Military Medical Care System
  • The Nineteenth Century: The Age of Amputation
  • The Twentieth Century: The Rise of Modern Military Medicine
  • The Emergence of Military Medicine
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 91-32404
LCC Class: RC971
Dewey Class: 616.9
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