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Literature Of Medicine: Aside from his scientific writing, he produced iographies, plays, and poems. He wrote Ascle-iad, a series of original researches in the :ience, art, and literature of medicine, which ap-ared quarterly from 1884 to 1895. He also ablished Diseases of Modern Life (1876) and Rational Health (1890).
RICHARDSON, Charles Francis, Ameri-in educator: b. Hallowell, Me., May 29, 1851;
Sugar Hill, N.H., Oct. 8, 1913. He wrote the •st comprehensive American literary history, tnerican Literature 1607-1885 (2 vols., 1887-i), which dealt with the development of Ameri-n thought as well as with standard literary rms.
Literature After World War I. A new period in Greek literature opened with the third decade of the 20th century. After the defeat in Asia Minor and the catastrophe of 1922, disillusion, skepti¬cism, and loss of faith dominated the younger writers, while the older ones continued on their well-defined paths. Post-World War I literature, reflecting the new critical times, developed interesting modes of expression. In poetry there tation (see BYZANTINE Music).See Also Practiced Medicine In Several:ROLPH, rolf, John, Canadian politician and physician: b. Thornbury, England, March 4, 1793; d. Mitchell, Ontario, Canada, Oct. 19, 1870. He studied law and medicine, emigrated to Canada in 1812, and in 1821 was called to the bar. He en¬gaged in law practice and later also practiced medicine in several medi¬cine. He served in the Assembly of Upper Canada from 1824 to 1837. With William Lyon Mackenzie (1795-1861) he planned the insurrection of 1837 and upon its failure sought safety in the United States. After the amnesty of 1843 he returned to Canada and sat in the Canadian Parliament from 1845 until his retirement from politics in 1857. He afterward devoted himself to the practice of medicine and founded the Peoples' School of Medicine, which later became a faculty of the University of Toronto.
RADCLIFFE, John, English physician: b. Wakefield, England, 1650 ; d. Carshalton, Nov. 1, 1714. He was graduated from University Col¬lege, Oxford, in 1669, and from then until 1677 was a fellow of Lincoln College. Meanwhile, in 1675, he obtained a medical degree and practiced medicine in several medicine in Oxford until 1684. Moving to Lon¬don, he soon became one of the leading physicians of the period, numbering William III, Queen Mary, and other members of the royal family among his patients, and amassed a large fortune. He was elected to Parliament in 1690 and 1713, and for many years served as governor of St.
On The Other Hand See Study Medicine:Von Diringshofen, Heinz (Jan. 22, 1900—May 5, 1967). As a pioneer of flight medicine, in 1933 Von Diringshofen established the Institute of Flight Medicine, in Berlin, and several years later, the Luftwaffe's medical test center in Juterbog. One of the first to study medicine the effects of weightlessness on humans, in 1934 he built the first centrifuge for testing the effects of ac¬celeration on the human body.
IRATA, he-ra-ta, Atsutane (1776-1843), Jap-ese scholar, who was a master of kokugaku national learning")—the study medicine of Japanese issics from a nationalistic viewpoint. Hirata us born in Dewa, Akita prefecture. After study medicine-; medicine and Confucian philosophy, he went Edo (Tokyo), where he was strongly influ-:ed by the writings of the kokugaku scholar >rinaga Motoori. Through the study medicine of early >anese classics, Hirata sought to identify the tterns of life and thought in Japan during the iod before they were modified by Buddhism 1 Confucianism. Hirata published nearly one hundred books. |
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