Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Средневековая медицина" in Russian language version.
I will now briefly allude to some historical accounts on this subject, particularly as regards the Old World. In the Aphorisms of Hippo crates, 400 b.c., and in the Sentences of Celsus, 400 years after Hippocrates, as found in Sprengell's translations, in 1708. When Sprengell alludes to his own added Aphorisms " On the French dis-ease," he says, it was just known to former more temperate ages, and, in a note, how far it was known in former ages, he refers to Ecclesiasticus, c. 19, v. 2, 3. Hippocrates, in. ; Epidemics, ill., 41, 74, 59, and i. Be Morbus Mulierum, 127. Galen, lib. iv. ; Meth. c. 5, and lib. i. De Genet:, c. 23 ; lib. iii. Epidemics, sec. 3, com. 25. Pliny His. Nat., lib. 26, c. i. Avicen, lib. 2. Valesius; Rhodius ; Vigo-nius, Lib. de Morb. Gall., c. &c. And that it does not, according to the vulgar opinion, derive its origin from Naples, France, East or West Indies. Josephus, c. xi., p. 108, says, when on the subject of purification, that Moses ordered those who had gonorrhoea should not come into the city.Архивная копия от 27 сентября 2011 на Wayback Machine
I will now briefly allude to some historical accounts on this subject, particularly as regards the Old World. In the Aphorisms of Hippo crates, 400 b.c., and in the Sentences of Celsus, 400 years after Hippocrates, as found in Sprengell's translations, in 1708. When Sprengell alludes to his own added Aphorisms " On the French dis-ease," he says, it was just known to former more temperate ages, and, in a note, how far it was known in former ages, he refers to Ecclesiasticus, c. 19, v. 2, 3. Hippocrates, in. ; Epidemics, ill., 41, 74, 59, and i. Be Morbus Mulierum, 127. Galen, lib. iv. ; Meth. c. 5, and lib. i. De Genet:, c. 23 ; lib. iii. Epidemics, sec. 3, com. 25. Pliny His. Nat., lib. 26, c. i. Avicen, lib. 2. Valesius; Rhodius ; Vigo-nius, Lib. de Morb. Gall., c. &c. And that it does not, according to the vulgar opinion, derive its origin from Naples, France, East or West Indies. Josephus, c. xi., p. 108, says, when on the subject of purification, that Moses ordered those who had gonorrhoea should not come into the city.Архивная копия от 27 сентября 2011 на Wayback Machine