![ANATOPOD - The Anatomy Podcast](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/10119163/podcastlogo.jpg)
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Welcome to a new and exciting Podcast called ANATOPOD designed to teach anatomy. ANATOPOD aims not just to teach anatomy well to a high and practical level but also to introduce the history of anatomy and dissection of the cadaver. I appreciate that anatomy is a visual tradition but it wasn't always like that. In the Renaissance, anatomy was taught from textbooks written by the Greek Galen in the first century A.D. Perhaps it might seem unusual to revert anatomy teaching to an aural basis but it is recognized too that in this modern age anatomy departments in universities all over the world are dispensing with their raision d’être, the cadaver, replacing it with surrogates and models. We still do not know the effects of this change on the care of our patients but what we do know is that the cadaver is part of our death culture as much as it touches so many other aspects of society at large.
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![The Beginnings of Autopsy History of Anatomy (3)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/10119163/podcastlogo_300x300.jpg)
Tuesday Jan 19, 2021
The Beginnings of Autopsy History of Anatomy (3)
Tuesday Jan 19, 2021
Tuesday Jan 19, 2021
From the earliest record by Fra Salimbene of an autopsy in 1286, the postmortem examination became the new method of estimating the cause of death. But the rise of autopsy and its social acceptance allowed the anatomists to dissect the human body for inquisitive means. In some cases like Boniface VIII it irked the Pope so much that he issued his decretal the Detestande feritatis Bull in 1299 prohibiting the separation of bodies, which was a method used to preserve the bones of Crusaders. But other Popes like Benedict XIV very much favoured the practice of examination of the corpse in the furthering of the understanding of the physical world. For Benedict (who issued his Notificazione in 1737) dissection of the human body was a powerful way to come to understand the mind of God. The rival cities of Bologna and Padua set up their theatrae anatomia, dissecting halls dedicated to dismantling corpses and their styles governed the public spectacles of dissection for the next 200 years. In this podcast the story of autopsy is considered through its headiest days and to its ultimate modern decline.
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