Volcher Coiter

Summary

Volcher Coiter (also spelled Coyter or Koyter; Latin: Volcherus Coiterus; 1534 – 2 June 1576) was a Dutch anatomist who established the study of comparative osteology and first described cerebrospinal meningitis. He also studied the human eye and was able to demonstrate the replenishment of the aqueous humor. Coiter's muscle is a name sometimes used for the corrugator superciliaris that is involved in wrinkling of the eyebrow. He illustrated his works with his own meticulously detailed drawings.

Volcher Coiter
Born1534
Died2 June 1576
NationalityDutch
Scientific career
FieldsAnatomy
Academic advisorsUlisse Aldrovandi
Gabriele Falloppio
Bartolomeo Eustachi
Guillaume Rondelet

Biography edit

 
Skeletons of a cormorant, a starling, a crane, skulls of a woodpecker and wryneck. Illustrations by Coiter

Coiter was born in a patrician family in Groningen. His father was a jurist and he studied initially under Regnerus Praedinius at the St. Martin's School in Groningen. Excelling in Latin, dialectics and mathematics, he received a stipend from the city to study abroad for five years which led him to study from 1555 in Italy and France and was a pupil of Ulisse Aldrovandi and Giulio Arenzi in Bologna; Gabriele Falloppio in Padua; Bartolomeo Eustachi in Rome; and Guillaume Rondelet. In Montpelier he met Felix Platter. He spent some time in Tübingen, possibly studying under Leonhart Fuchs. He graduated in 1562 with a doctor of arts and medicine and returned to Bologna in 1563 as a teacher. He often clashed with barber surgeons. In 1565 he was sent to jail in Rome partly because he was a Protestant but was released by assistance from Germans and then was forced to leave Italy. He moved to Amberg serving as physician to the Duke of Bavaria before he became city physician of Nuremberg in 1569. He was often asked to conduct autopsies and dissect criminals who had been condemned to death. He published several works on human anatomy, wrote on the merits of medicinal baths, and wrote notes on the lectures of Falloppio. In 1575 he took part in the French Wars of Religion as field surgeon to Count Palatine Johann Casimir who went into France to support the Huguenots. He returned ill and died in Champagne during the German forces' return march.[1][2] His widow Helena was forced to deal with his debts.[3]

His works included Externarum et Internarum Principalium Humani Corporis Partium Tabulae (1572)[4] and De Avium Sceletis et Praecipius Musculis (1575). His work included detailed anatomical studies of birds and included careful illustrations made by him[5] signed "V.C.D." (=Volcher Coiter Delineat). Among his other works was a classification of the birds based on structure and habits. His works on human anatomy included studies of the ear, and the eye. He described the corrugator muscles above the eye (which cause the wrinkling of the eyebrow) which are sometimes called Coiter's muscles. He also examined the development of chicken embryos inside eggs.[6][7] He also examined the bones of a human foetus.[8] He produced an early dichotomous classification key based on anatomical characters.[9] He was said to have played the lute and taught Felix Platter to play the harp.[1][10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mark, H. H. (2009). "Volcher Coiter on the Eye". Eye. 23 (8): 1629–1632. doi:10.1038/eye.2009.135. ISSN 0950-222X.
  2. ^ Groß, Dominik; Steinmetzer, Jan (2005). "Strategien ärztlicher Selbstautorisierung in der frühneuzeitlichen Medizin: Das Beispiel Volcher Coiters (1534–1576) / Strategies of medical self-authorisation in early modern medicine: The example of Volcher Coiter (1534–1576)". Medizinhistorisches Journal. 40 (3/4): 275–320. ISSN 0025-8431. JSTOR 25805403.
  3. ^ Schullian, Dorothy M. (1951). "New Documents on Volcher Coiter". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 6 (2): 176–194. ISSN 0022-5045. JSTOR 24619758.
  4. ^ Externarum et internarum principalium humani corporis partium tabulae... (in Latin) (1572), 1st ed., Nuremberg: Théodore Gerlatzen. at the Internet Archive
  5. ^ Bainbridge, David (2019). "Volcher Coiter (1534–1576): De Partibus Similaribus Humani Corporis, 1575". Stripped Bare: The Art of Animal Anatomy. Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9780691183978. ISBN 978-0-691-18397-8.
  6. ^ Adelmann, H.B. (1933). "The "De Ovorum Gallinaceorum Generationis Primo Exordio" of Volcher Coiter (Part I)". Ann. Med. Hist. 5 (4): 327–341. PMC 7945389. PMID 33944207.
  7. ^ Adelmann, H.B. (1933). "The "De Ovorum Gallinaceorum Generationis Primo Exordio, Etc." of Volcher Coiter (Part II, Conclusion)". Ann. Med. Hist. 5 (5): 444–457. PMC 7945431. PMID 33944230.
  8. ^ McDaniel, W.B. (1938). "Notes on the "Tractatus De Ossibus Foetus" of Volcher Coiter". Ann. Med. Hist. 10 (2): 189–190. PMC 7932607. PMID 33943185.
  9. ^ Allen, Elsa G. (1951). "The History of American Ornithology before Audubon". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. New series. 41 (3): 387–591. doi:10.2307/1005629. hdl:2027/uc1.31822011760568. JSTOR 1005629.
  10. ^ Bäumer, Änne (1988). "Der Nürnberger Arzt Volcher Coiter: Anatom und Zoologe". Medizinhistorisches Journal. 23 (3/4): 224–239. ISSN 0025-8431. JSTOR 25803952.

Further reading edit

  • Stresemann, Erwin (1975). Ornithology from Aristotle to the Present. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-64485-4.

External links edit

  • "Coiter, Volcher" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • Lectiones Gabrielis Fallopii, de Partibus similaribus humani corporis, ex diversis exemplaribus a Volchero Coiter (Scanned work, 1575)
  • Externarum et internarum principalium humani corporis partium tabulae (1572) (Internet Archive)