[New Book] Galen’s Remedies in the Early Modern Period: Traditions, Theories, Transformations, and Trades (1400-1750)

Editors: John Wilkins & Fabrizio Bigotti (University of Exeter)

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan, 2026

Surviving the demise of his humoral pathology and anatomy, Galen’s works on simple and compound remedies (the so-called ‘galenicals’) formed the backbone of Western pharmacology up until the Industrial Revolution. Over its long and multicultural tradition—spanning the Roman Empire and Byzantium, through Islamicate societies, India, and China, to the New World and even Japan—Galenic pharmacopoeia evolved to incorporate new remedies, foods, philosophical rationales, and modes of preparation, including chemical ones. Despite its endurance, a systematic exploration of the use of galenicals beyond the Renaissance remains overdue.

Addressing this gap, the contributions in this volume bring together leading scholars who illuminate how this medical tradition unfolded in the early modern period and its underlying dynamics, often drawing on new or overlooked archival material. Challenging the prevailing narrative of decline, they examine how pharmacological knowledge was transmitted across languages and medical traditions.

Each contribution highlights an aspect of the various conceptual adaptations this process entailed, including textual transmission, debates over the structure of matter, occult qualities, dosage quantification, apothecary regulations, patient treatment, and the integration of galenicals into household medicine. Special attention is also given to the commodification of materia medica in Atlantic trade, while a comprehensive introduction contextualises the main themes of Galen’s post-Renaissance legacy and explores the reasons for its enduring vitality.

Contents

Introduction: Beyond Decline: The Long Afterlife of Galenic Pharmacopoeia – John Wilkins & Fabrizio Bigotti

Galen’s De Simplicibus from Byzantium to the Early-Modern World: A Difficult Assimilation? – Alain Touwaide

Copyists and Translators of Galen’s De antidotis in the Renaissance: Georgios Alexandrou, Petros Hypselas, Iosephus Struthius, and Michelangelo Angelico – Simone Mucci

Pharmacological Tables of Galen’s De Simplicibus in Leonhart Fuchs and Janus Cornarius – Maximilian Haars

A Matter of Taste: Lorenz Gry ll and His De sapore (1566) – Vivian Nutton

Determining Dosage: The Rationalisation of Galenic Therapy in the Long Renaissance – Fabrizio Bigotti

Sympathy, Antipathy, and the Nature of Occult Qualities in Galen and Jean Fernel – Brooke Holmes

Drug Absorption and Food Digestion in Late Renaissance Medicine: The Galenic Interpretation of Jean Fernel (1567) – Elisabeth Moreau

Reductionism and Emergentism in Sixteenth-Century Theories of Antidotes: The Cases of Thomas Erastus and Girolamo Mercuriale – Andreas Blank

The Role of Lignum Vitae (Guaiacum sanctum L.) in the Context of the Majorcan Reception of Galen’s Pharmacology (Fifteenth to Sixteenth Centuries) – Pablo José Alcover Cateura

The Columbian Exchange and Galenic Pharmacology: Galenic Materia Medica in the Viceroyalty of New Spain – Paula De Vos

Between Tradition and Transformation. Galenic Simples and Paracelsian Iatrochemistry in Early Modern English Domestic Medicine – Zoe Screti

The Case of Corallium Rubrum. Controversies and Consistencies in the Interpretation of a Galenic Simple in Early Modern England – Francesca Elizabeth Richards

Bibliography
Index
Notes on Contributors

Source: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-032-00725-4