William Harvey and the circulation of the blood.

Date:
1928
  • Film

About this work

Description

A version or inomplete copy of the first edition of one of the most notable films in the history of medical and scientific film (subsequent editions; 1957, 1971-72, 1978), made to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the publication of Harvey's "Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cardis et Sanguinis" (1628). Against the historical background of classical Galenic and Renaissance cardio-vascular anatomy and physiology, Henry dale re-enacts Harvey's physiological experiments demonstrating the circualtion of the blood in animals and man, while the captions re-trace Harvey's experimental reasoning as given in Robert Willis' 1847 translation of "De Motu Cordis". A fascinating demonstration of experimental-physiological method, and an extremley powerful affirmation of historical continuity in the research methods of modern medical science, symbolized by the famous trompe d'oeil fusion of Henry Dale's and Harvey's hands in the opening and closing frames.

Publication/Creation

UK : [publisher not identified], 1928.

Physical description

1 film reels (30 min. total) : silent, black and white

Notes

An incomplete copy of unknown provenance copied from materials from the BFI. The film is mising the opening intertitle and some of the sequences such as William Harvey's portrait at the beginning.

Creator/production credits

Henry Dale and Sir Thomas Lewis for the Royal College of Physicians of London.

Copyright note

Wellcome Trust.

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
    5351F
    By appointmentManual request

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