1800s surgeon

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for 1800s surgeon. Get inspired and try out new things.
Madame Dimanche, also known as Widow Sunday, was a French woman living in Paris in the early 1800s. At the age of 76, a cutaneous horn began growing from the washerwoman’s forehead. Over the next six years, it grew to the length of 24.9 cm (9.8") before it was successfully removed by French surgeon Br. Joseph Souberbeille. Strange People, Human Oddities, Weird But True, Bizarre Facts, History Facts Interesting, Weird Science, Madame Tussauds, Mystery Of History, Medical History

Madame Dimanche, also known as Widow Sunday, was a French woman living in Paris in the early 1800s. At the age of 76, a cutaneous horn began growing from the washerwoman’s forehead. Over the next six years, it grew to the length of 24.9 cm (9.8") before it was successfully removed by French surgeon Br. Joseph Souberbeille.

Avatar
amy o
Fingers sawn off, cheeks sliced wide open, and eyeballs pierced with scalpels - these are just some of the medical operations featured in a new book about 19th century surgery. Annotations designed to guide the steady hands of surgeons in the 1800s have been published by a medical historian in a new book called Crucial Interventions. New Books, Steady Hands, Historical Documents, Anatomy Art, To Sleep, Surgery, Anatomy, 19th Century, Medical

Fingers sawn off, cheeks sliced wide open, and eyeballs pierced with scalpels - these are just some of the medical operations featured in a new book about 19th century surgery. Annotations designed to guide the steady hands of surgeons in the 1800s have been published by a medical historian in a new book called Crucial Interventions.

Avatar
Keli rae

Related interests