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Brunschwig’s surgical armamentarium

Brunschwig’s surgical armamentarium.jpg Bringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquaryBringing up a youth in the middle agesThumbnailsByzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquary

From Gurlt’s “Geschichte der Chirurgie”
 
Hans von Gerssdorff and Hieronymus Brunschwig, who flourished in the latter half of the fifteenth century in Germany, have both left early printed treatises on Surgery which give excellent woodcuts showing pictures of instruments, operations, and costumes, at the end of the medieval period.