Dominik Wujastyk
Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Dominik Wujastyk.
Medical History | 2007
Dominik Wujastyk
In 1396 (798/799), two hundred years before Vesalius, the Persian author Mans: ur ibn Muh:ammad ibn Ah:mad ibn Y usuf ibn Faq h Ily as composed a treatise on anatomy entitled Tas:r h: -i Mans: ur that summarized many of the observations of Galen. It was not the first such treatise to be composed in the Islamic world, but it was the first to be accompanied by drawings of the human body in anatomical detail. About seventy manuscripts containing these drawings survive to the present day, scattered in libraries from Baghdad to Paris, and of course in the Wellcome Library in London. This tradition of anatomical illustrations has been known to medical historians as the F€ unfbilderserie or ‘‘Five-picture’’ series since the early study by Karl Sudhoff. In fact, as the series has become better known through the study of a wider sampling of manuscripts, it has become clear that it consists of six, seven, or even more standard images. This Persian tradition of anatomical illustration has many interesting features and questions associated with it, which have more recently been discussed by Roger French, Emilie Savage-Smith, and others. For the present purposes, however, it is sufficient for us to see one of these images, in order to recognize the main pictorial details of this tradition. Figure 1 shows an example. These figures typically face the viewer (although one of the other standard figures faces away), the legs are bent, the hands are on the thighs, the head is circular, the internal organs, including intestines, are displayed, and labelled with text. After Islam, and in particular the Mughal dynasty, had established itself decisively as a cultural power in the South Asian subcontinent, manuscripts such as these were copied in
Journal of Indian Philosophy | 2000
Dominik Wujastyk
This paper explores some combinatoric problems which are treated in the Sanskrit literature of both ayurveda (medicine) and of jyothsastra (mathematics).
Penguin: Delhi. (2001) | 2001
Dominik Wujastyk
Journal of Indian Philosophy | 2005
Dominik Wujastyk
In: Flood, G, (ed.) The Blackwell companion to Hinduism. (pp. 393-409). Blackwell: Oxford. (2005) | 2007
Dominik Wujastyk
In: Wujastyk, D and Smith, FM, (eds.) Modern and Global Ayurveda: Pluralism and Paradigms. (pp. 43-76). SUNY Press: New York. (2008) | 2008
Dominik Wujastyk
Journal of Indian Philosophy | 2004
Dominik Wujastyk
International Institute for Asian Studies Newsletter , 31 p. 21. (2003) | 2003
Dominik Wujastyk
In: Salema, A, (ed.) Ayurveda at the crossroads of care and cure. (pp. 45-73). Centro de Historia de Alem-Mar: Lisboa. (2002) | 2002
Dominik Wujastyk
Papers from the World Sanskrit Conference, Helsinki 2003. Motilal Banarsidass: Delhi. (2009) | 2009
Dominik Wujastyk