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Julius Caesar Aranzi

Julius Caesar Aranzi (1530-1589) was a leading figure in the history of the science of human anatomy.

He was anatomical professor for thirty-two years in the university of Bologna. From him came the first correct account of the anatomical peculiarities of the foetus, and he was the first to show that the muscles of the eye do not, as was falsely imagined, arise from the dura mater[?] but from the margin of the optic hole. He also, after considering the anatomical relations of the cavities of the heart, the valves and the great vessels, corroborates the views of Columbus regarding the course which the blood follows in passing from the right to the left side of the heart. Aranzi is the first anatomist who describes distinctly the inferior cornua of the ventricles[?] of the cerebrum[?], who recognizes the objects by which they are distinguished, and who gives them the name by which they are still known (hippocampus); and his account is more minute and perspicuous than that of the authors of the subsequent century. He speaks at large of the choroid plexus[?], and gives a particular description of the fourth ventricle, under the name of cistern of the cerebellum, as a discovery of his own.



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