Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
References
Parker G. The early history of hospitals (before 1348). Brit J Surg. 1928;16(61):39–50.
Carstens HR. The history of hospitals, with special reference to some of the world’s oldest institutions. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155:JC3–6.
Goldin G. Historical Hospitals of Europe, 1200–1981. http://cuwhist.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/historic-hospitals-of-europe-1200-1981.pdf
Soylemez MM. The Jundishapur School: its history structure and functions. Am J Islam Soc Sci. 2005;22(2):1–27.
Seltzer R. Down from Troy: A doctor comes of age. New York, NY: William Morrow; 1992.
Osler W. Address delivered on the occasion of Troy Hospital’s golden jubilee, November 1900. In: Diamond Jubilee of the Troy Hospital. Troy, NY: Troy Hospital; 1900. p. 48–56.
Moran ME. Sir William Osler’s speech at Troy: a Trojan horse? Baylor Univ Med Cent Proceed. 2012;25(1):62–5.
Price S. Three early modern Utopias: Utopia, New Atlantis, The Isle of Pines. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press; 1999.
Whitteridge G, Stokes V. A brief history of the hospital of Saint Bartholomew. London: Brown Knight & Truscott; 1961.
Dobson M. A medical commentary on fixed air. London: J. Monk; 1779.
Mellick S. Sir Thomas Browne: physician 1605-1682 and the Religio Medici. ANZ J Surg. 2003;73(6): 431–7.
Green NA. A licence to practice. J R Soc Med. 1987;80:615–9.
Dobson J. Barber into surgeon. Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 1974;54:84–91.
Cope Z. William Cheselden and the separation of the barbers from the surgeons. Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 1953;12(1):1–13.
Shaw AB. Benjamin Gooch, eighteenth-century Norfolk surgeon. Med Hist. 1972;16(1):40–50.
Yelloly J. Particulars of a case in which a very large calculus was removed from the urethra of a female without operation; with examples of analogous cases. Med Chir Trans. 1815;6:574–82.
Shaw AB. The Norwich School of lithotomy. Med Hist. 1970;14(3):221–59.
Gooch B. Cases and practical remarks in surgery. London: D Wilson & T Durham; 1758.
Storey GO. John Yelloly (1774-1842). J Med Biogr. 2001;9:63–9.
Lonsdale K, Mason P. Uric acid, uric acid dehydrate, and urates in urinary calcluli, ancient and modern. Science. 1966;152:1511–2.
Lonsdale K, Sutor DJ, Wooley S. Composition of urinary calculi by X-ray diffraction. Collected data from various localities. I. Norwich (England) and district, 1773-1961. Brit J Urol. 1968;40:33–6.
Crosse JG. A treatise on the formation, constituents and extraction of the urinary calculus; being an Essay for the Jacksonian Prize for the Year 1833 was awarded by the Royal College of Surgeons in London. London: J. Churchill; 1835.
Cadge W. The surgical treatment of stone in the bladder. Br Med J. 1886;1:1149–54.
Power D. Some bygone operations in surgery I: Cutting for the stone. Brit J Surg. 1931;18:1–5.
Robinson RHOB. Master surgeons in urology. William Cheselden (1688-1752). Br J Urol. 2008;21(1):47–50.
Cheselden W. Anatomy of the human body. London: William Bowyer; 1713.
Gomiz Leon JJ. William Cheselden (1688-1752) and Gerard van der Gucht (1695-1776). Surgical technique, the art of printed images and controversy in the Urology Book of the XVIII century. Arch Esp Urol. 2009;62(9):695–701.
Cheselden W. Treatise on the high operation for the stone. London: John Osborn; 1723.
Joly JS. Stone and calculous disease of the urinary organs. St. Louis, MO: C.V. Mosby; 1929.
Herr HW. ‘Cutting for the stone’: the ancient art of lithotomy. BJU Int. 2008;101:1214–6.
Cope Z. William Cheselden. London: E & S Livingstone; 1953:1688–1752.
Douglas J. History of the lateral operation for the stone. London; 1726.
Neher A. The truth about our bones: William Chesleden’s Osteographia. Med Hist. 2010;54:517–28.
Yelloly J. Remarks on the tendency to calculous diseases; with observations on the nature of urinary concretions, and an analysis of a large part of the collection belonging to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital. Philos Trans R Soc Lond. 1829;119:55–81.
Hutchison AC. A further inquiry into the comparative frequency of calculous diseases among sea-faring people, with some observations on their frequency in Scotland. Med Chir Trans. 1831;16(pt. 1):94–127.
Yelloly J. Sequel to a paper on the tendency to calculous diseases, and on the concretions to which such diseases give rise. Philos Trans R Soc Lond. 1830;120:415–28.
Brock RC. The life and work of Sir Astley Cooper. Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 1969;44(1):1–18.
Cooper BB. The life of Sir Astley Cooper interspersed with sketches from his note-books of distinguished contemporary characters. London: John W Parker; 1843.
Jones R. Thomas Wakley, Astley Cooper and the death of George IV. J R Soc Med. 2007;100:314–20.
Burch D. Digging up the dead: uncovering the life and times of an extraordinary surgeon. London: Random House; 2007.
Burch D. The beauty of Bodysnatching. Nat Hist. http://www.naturalhistorymag.com/features/152237/the-beauty-of-bodysnatching
Arnott J. Lithectasy, or the extraction of the stone by slow and painless dilation. Lancet. 1843;ii:610–3.
Cooper A. An account of a case in which numerous calculi were extracted from the bladder, without the employment of cutting instruments. Med Chir Trans. 1821;11(Pt 2):349–60; 450–3.
Cooper A. Account of a stone and of a portion of catheter extracted from the female bladder by a dilator. With an appendix by Mr. Chapman of Wandsworth, and by Mr. Birt, of Diss, Norfolk, on the removal of a catheter and of a stone from the female bladder by dilation. Med Chir Trans. 1822;12(Pt 1):235–46; 254–7.
Roach M. Stiff. The curious lives of human cadavers. New York, NY: W.W. Norton; 2003.
Wakley T. A report of the trial of Cooper v. Wakley, For an Alleged Libel, taken by shorthand writers employed expressly for the occasion. London: Office of the Lancet; 1829.
Kiefer JH. Jean Civiale (1792-1867). Invest Urol. 1968;6(1):114–7.
Jardin A. The history of urology in France. De Historia Urologiae Europaeae. 1996;3:11–34.
Poisson SD, Double FJ, et al. Recherches de Statistique sur l’affection calculeuse, par M. Le docteur Civiale. Comptes Rendus Hebdom Séanc Acad Sciences. 1835;1:171–2.
Ackerknecht EH. Medicine at the Paris Hospital, 1794-1848. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press; 1967.
Jaakko E. Urology at Necker Hospital 1996: a Scandanavian view. De Historia Urologiae Europaeae. 2007;14:65–78.
European Association of Urology. In Mattelaer JJ, Schultheiss D, editors. Europe. The cradle of urology. Amsterdam: History Office EAU; 2010.
Dukes CE. The history of St. Peter’s Hospital for Stone, London. Proc R Soc Med. 1956;50(161):161–4.
Higham ARC. The history of St. Paul’s Hospital, London. Proc R Soc Med. 1956;50:164–6.
Fitzpatrick JM. Happy 80th Anniversary BJUI. BJUI 2010;105(6):i.
Winsbury-White HP. Stone in the urinary tract. London: Churchill; 1929.
Goelnicht DC. The poet-physician: Keats and medical science. Pittsburgh, PA: Univ Pittsburgh Press; 1984.
Osler W. John Keats the apothecary poet. Johns Hopkins Hosp Bull. 1896;58:37–54.
Banerjee AK. John Keats: his medical student years at the United Hospitals of Guy’s and St. Thomas’ 1815-1816. J R Soc Med. 1989;82:620–1.
Bernard J. John Keats. The complete poems. London: Penguin; 1973.
Shelley PB. The complete poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Mary Shelley (Preface). New York, NY: The Modern Library; 1994.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Moran, M.E. (2014). The Stone Hospital and Stone Treatment. In: Urolithiasis. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8196-6_16
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8196-6_16
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, New York, NY
Print ISBN: 978-1-4614-8195-9
Online ISBN: 978-1-4614-8196-6
eBook Packages: MedicineMedicine (R0)