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        <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="PART I. ANCIENT MEDICINE" ORDERLABEL="1">
            <METS:fptr FILEID="00000023" />
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Preface" ORDERLABEL="2">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000013" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter I. Development of the Science and Art of Medicine" ORDERLABEL="3">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000025" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter II. Oriental Medicine" ORDERLABEL="4">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000033" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter III. Oriental Medicine (continued)" ORDERLABEL="5">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000047" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter IV. Greek Medicine at the Dawn of History" ORDERLABEL="6">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000068" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter V. The Significance of the Serpent in the Statues and Votive Offerings Exposed to View in the Aesculapian Temples" ORDERLABEL="7">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000088" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter VI. The Beginnings of a Rational System of Medicine in Greece" ORDERLABEL="8">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000095" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter VII. Hippocrates the Great" ORDERLABEL="9">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000113" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter VIII. Brief Extracts from Some of the Hippocratic Writings" ORDERLABEL="10">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000121" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter IX. The State of Greek Medicine after the Events of the Peloponnesian War; the Founding of Alexandria in Egypt, at the Mouth of the Nile; and the Development of Different Sects in Medicine" ORDERLABEL="11">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000128" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter X. Erasistratus and Herophilus, the Two Great Leaders in Medicine at Alexandria; the Founding of New Sects" ORDERLABEL="12">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000136" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XI. Asclepiades, the Introducer of Greek Medicine into Rome" ORDERLABEL="13">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000148" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XII. The State of Medicine at Rome after the Death of Asclepiades; the Founding of the School of the Methodists" ORDERLABEL="14">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000161" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XIII. The Further History of Methodism at Rome, and the Development of Two New Sects, viz., the Pneumatists and the Eclectics-A General Survey of the Subject of Sects in Medicine" ORDERLABEL="15">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000170" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XIV. Well-known Medical Authors of the Early Centuries of the Christian Era" ORDERLABEL="16">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000183" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XV. Claudius Galen" ORDERLABEL="17">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000192" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XVI. The Influence of Christianity upon the Evolution of Medicine" ORDERLABEL="18">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000211" />
            </METS:div>
        </METS:div>
        <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="PART II. MEDIAEVAL MEDICINE" ORDERLABEL="19">
            <METS:fptr FILEID="00000221" />
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XVII. The Condition of Medicine at Byzantium during the Early Part of the Middle Ages" ORDERLABEL="20">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000223" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XVIII. Beginning of the Arab Renaissance under the Caliphs of Bagdad" ORDERLABEL="21">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000235" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XIX. Further Advance of the Arab Renaissance during the Ninth and Succeeding Centuries of the Christian Era" ORDERLABEL="22">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000244" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XX. Hospitals and Monasteries in the Middle Ages" ORDERLABEL="23">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000267" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXI. Medical Instruction at Salerno, Italy, in the Middle Ages" ORDERLABEL="24">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000275" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXII. Early Evidences of the Influence of the Renaissance upon the Progress of Medicine in Western Europe" ORDERLABEL="25">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000291" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXIII. Further Progress of Medicine and Surgery in Western Europe during the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and a Part of the Fifteenth Centuries" ORDERLABEL="26">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000301" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXIV. During the Latter Half of the Middle Ages Surgery Assumes the Most Prominent Place in the Advance of Medical Science" ORDERLABEL="27">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000328" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXV. Brief History of the Allied SciencesPharmacy, Chemistry and Balneotherapeutics" ORDERLABEL="28">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000355" />
            </METS:div>
        </METS:div>
        <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="PART III. MEDICINE DURING THE RENAISSANCE" ORDERLABEL="29">
            <METS:fptr FILEID="00000365" />
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXVI. Important Events that Preceded the Renaissance-Early Attempts to Dissect the Human Body" ORDERLABEL="30">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000367" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXVII. The Founders of Human Anatomy and Physiology" ORDERLABEL="31">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000380" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXVIII. Further Details Concerning the Advance in Our Knowledge of Anatomy.-Dissecting Made a Part of the Regular Training of a Medical Student.-Iatrochemists and Iatrophysicists.-The Employment of Latin in Lecturing and Writing on Medical Topics" ORDERLABEL="32">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000397" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXIX. The Contributions Made by Different Men during the Renaissance, and More particularly by William Harvey of England, to Our Knowledge of the Circulation of the Blood, Lymph and Chyle" ORDERLABEL="33">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000413" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXX. Advances Made in Internal Medicine and in the Collateral Branches of Botany, Pharmacology, Chemistry and Pathological Anatomy" ORDERLABEL="34">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000431" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXI. Chemistry and Experimental Pharmacology" ORDERLABEL="35">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000442" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXII. Some of the Leaders in Medicine in Italy, France and England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries" ORDERLABEL="36">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000455" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXX III. The Three Leading Physicians of Germany during the Latter Half of the Seventeenth Century: Franz de le Boë Sylvius, Friedrich Hoffmann and Georg Ernst Stahl" ORDERLABEL="37">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000474" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXX IV. Hermann Boerhaave of Leyden, Holland, one of the Most Distinguished Physicians of the Seventeenth Century" ORDERLABEL="38">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000486" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXV. General Remarks on the Development of Surgery in Europe during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries" ORDERLABEL="39">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000494" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXVI. Surgery in Germany and Switzerland during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries" ORDERLABEL="40">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000502" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXVII. The Development of Surgery in Italy during the Renaissance" ORDERLABEL="41">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000520" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXVIII. The Development of Surgery in Spain and Portugal during the Renaissance" ORDERLABEL="42">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000532" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XXXIX. The Development of Surgery in France during the Renaissance-Pierre Franco" ORDERLABEL="43">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000538" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XL. The Development of Surgery in France (continued).-Ambroise Pare" ORDERLABEL="44">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000547" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XLI. Surgery in Great Britain during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries" ORDERLABEL="45">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000566" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XLII. Reforms Instituted by the Italian Surgeon Magati in the Treatment of Wounds.-Final Ending of the Feud between the Surgeons and the Physicians of Paris.-Revival of Interest in the Science of Obstetrics" ORDERLABEL="46">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000579" />
            </METS:div>
            <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="Chapter XLIII. The First Appearance of Syphilis in Europe as an Epidemic Disease.-Medical Journalism.-The Beginnings of a Modern. Pharmacopoeia.-Itinerant Lithotomists" ORDERLABEL="47">
                <METS:fptr FILEID="00000592" />
            </METS:div>
        </METS:div>
        <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="List of the More Important Authorities Consulted" ORDERLABEL="48">
            <METS:fptr FILEID="00000611" />
        </METS:div>
        <METS:div TYPE="Chapter" LABEL="General Index" ORDERLABEL="49">
            <METS:fptr FILEID="00000617" />
        </METS:div>
    </METS:structMap>
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