International Historical Society’s Meeting in Padua
Robert J. Ruben, MD Last August, the International Society of the History of Otolaryngology conducted its sixth working meeting in the historic medical school of Padua University, 20 miles west of Venice, Italy. The host was Alessandro Martini, MD. The wide-ranging program attended by 30 participants included historical aspects of anatomy, research, global hearing health, and giants in the specialty, with speakers from Canada, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and United States. It addressed such famous historical figures as Kaiser Frederick III, the composer Giacomo Puccini, and the discoverer of ancient Troy, Heinrich Schliemann. The meeting opened with a tribute to our departed colleague, Dafydd “Dai” Stephens, PhD, professor of audiological medicine, Sussex University, UK. The meeting continued with the following presentations: Bonaventura Angeli and His Description of Ménière’s Symptoms in “De Vertigine et Scotomia,” by Alessandro Martini, et al; Symbols of Medicine in the Seal of the Padua Medical School, by Giorgio Zanchin; Historico-medical Research in Otology: Pitfalls, Doubts, and Successes, by Albert Mudry and Wolfgang Pirsig; Who First Described and Depicted the Foramen in the Anterior External Bony Auditory Meatus, Mostly Termed Foramen of Huschke?, by Wolfgang Pirsig and Albert Mudry; Three Knights of King’s—Sir Victor Negus, by Neil Weir; Analysis of a Letter from Felix Semon to Count Herbert von Bismarck, Secretary of State of Prussia, Concerning Frederick III of Prussia, Dated July 12, 1888, by Robert J. Ruben and Wolfgang Pirsig; Forty to 300 Million with Disabling Hearing Loss, 1985-2005: How the WHO Changed its Mind, by Peter W. Alberti; A Brief History of Mastoidectomy and the Role of Hermann Schwartze, by Stefan K. Plontke, et al; The Last Journey of Heinrich Schliemann, by R. Ragona Marchese, I. Mylionakis, and Alessandro Martini; Role to Define: Medicine and Deafness in Nineteenth-century France, by Sabine Arnaud; The Unfinished Turandot and Puccini’s Laryngeal Cancer, by R. Ragona Marchese and Alessandro Martini: Wenzel Leopold Gruber and His Ligament at an Anthropological Edge, by Herwig Swoboda; and Liaisons Heureuses—Medicine Between Padua, Trieste, and Vienna, by Herwig Swoboda. In addition to this fascinating and thought-provoking program, we visited Padua’s Anatomical Theater, established by the pioneering anatomist Girolamo ab Aquapendente; the Hortus Simplicius, the first botanical garden devoted to the teaching and study of plants of medical interest; and the Museum of the History of Medicine and Health (Museo di Storia della Medicina e della Salute). The society’s next meeting will be in Vienna, Austria, September 13-14. To learn more, email Albert Mudry at albert@oreillemudry.ch, or Wolfgang Pirsig at wolfgang.pirsig@extern.uni-ulm.de or museum@entnet.org.
Robert J. Ruben, MD
Last August, the International Society of the History of Otolaryngology conducted its sixth working meeting in the historic medical school of Padua University, 20 miles west of Venice, Italy. The host was Alessandro Martini, MD.
The wide-ranging program attended by 30 participants included historical aspects of anatomy, research, global hearing health, and giants in the specialty, with speakers from Canada, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and United States. It addressed such famous historical figures as Kaiser Frederick III, the composer Giacomo Puccini, and the discoverer of ancient Troy, Heinrich Schliemann.
The meeting opened with a tribute to our departed colleague, Dafydd “Dai” Stephens, PhD, professor of audiological medicine, Sussex University, UK.
The meeting continued with the following presentations:
- Bonaventura Angeli and His Description of Ménière’s Symptoms in “De Vertigine et Scotomia,” by Alessandro Martini, et al;
- Symbols of Medicine in the Seal of the Padua Medical School, by Giorgio Zanchin;
- Historico-medical Research in Otology: Pitfalls, Doubts, and Successes, by Albert Mudry and Wolfgang Pirsig;
- Who First Described and Depicted the Foramen in the Anterior External Bony Auditory Meatus, Mostly Termed Foramen of Huschke?, by Wolfgang Pirsig and Albert Mudry;
- Three Knights of King’s—Sir Victor Negus, by Neil Weir;
- Analysis of a Letter from Felix Semon to Count Herbert von Bismarck, Secretary of State of Prussia, Concerning Frederick III of Prussia, Dated July 12, 1888, by Robert J. Ruben and Wolfgang Pirsig;
- Forty to 300 Million with Disabling Hearing Loss, 1985-2005: How the WHO Changed its Mind, by Peter W. Alberti;
- A Brief History of Mastoidectomy and the Role of Hermann Schwartze, by Stefan K. Plontke, et al;
- The Last Journey of Heinrich Schliemann, by R. Ragona Marchese, I. Mylionakis, and Alessandro Martini;
- Role to Define: Medicine and Deafness in Nineteenth-century France, by Sabine Arnaud;
- The Unfinished Turandot and Puccini’s Laryngeal Cancer, by R. Ragona Marchese and Alessandro Martini:
- Wenzel Leopold Gruber and His Ligament at an Anthropological Edge, by Herwig Swoboda; and
- Liaisons Heureuses—Medicine Between Padua, Trieste, and Vienna, by Herwig Swoboda.
In addition to this fascinating and thought-provoking program, we visited Padua’s Anatomical Theater, established by the pioneering anatomist Girolamo ab Aquapendente; the Hortus Simplicius, the first botanical garden devoted to the teaching and study of plants of medical interest; and the Museum of the History of Medicine and Health (Museo di Storia della Medicina e della Salute).
The society’s next meeting will be in Vienna, Austria, September 13-14. To learn more, email Albert Mudry at albert@oreillemudry.ch, or Wolfgang Pirsig at wolfgang.pirsig@extern.uni-ulm.de or museum@entnet.org.