The Sydenham Society was a medical society instituted in 1843 in London with the goal of improving the dissemination of medical text by means of translation.[1] The society was considered "defunct" in late 1857.[2]
It was named after the English physician Thomas Sydenham (1624–89).[2]
Prospectus
editThe prospectus of the Society by the time of its foundation in 1843 stated that:[2]
The Sydenham Society has been founded for the purpose of meeting certain acknowledged deficiencies in the diffusion of medical literature, which are not likely to be supplied by the efforts of individuals. It will carry this object into effect by distributing among its members —
1. Reprints of standard English medical works, which are rare and expensive.
2. Miscellaneous Selections from the ancient and from the earlier modern authors, reprinted or translated.
3. Digests of the most important matters contained in old and voluminous authors, British and foreign, with occasional biographical and bibliographical notices.
4. Translations of the Greek and Latin medical authors, and of works in the Arabic and other Eastern languages, accompanied, when it is thought desirable, by the original text.
5. Translations of recent foreign works of merit.
6. Original works of great merit, which might be very valuable as books of reference, but which would not otherwise be published, from not being likely to have a remunerating sale,—such as classified Bibliographies, and alphabetical Indexes to periodical publications and other valuable voluminous works.
Translations
editThe members of the Society produced several medical translations. As of 1856, membership in the society costed five dollars. Every year, the members received "three volumes, handsomely bound in a uniform manner in cloth, gilt edged". New members could acquire any previous volume for two dollars and fifty cents, or combinations of 3 volumes for five dollars.[1]
As of 2024, the works translated by the society have already fallen in the public domain and are available from online sources such as the Internet Archive.[3]
The volumes edited by the society included:[1]
Title | Author | Translator | Original language | Translation publication date | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sydenhami Opera Omnia | |||||
Hasse's Pathological Anatomy | |||||
A treatise on the Smallpox and Measles | Rhazes | William Alexander Greenhill | Arabic | 1848 | [4] |
The Forks of Hewson, portrait and plates | |||||
Dupuytren's Lectures on Diseases and Injuries of Bones | |||||
Dupuytren on Lesions of the Vascular System &c. | |||||
Memoirs of the French Academy of Surgery | |||||
Feuchtersleben's Medical Psychology | |||||
Microscopical Researches (Schwann) + Contributions to Phytogenesis (Schleiden) | Schwann and Schleiden | Henry Smith (presumably Henry Spencer Smith) | German | 1847 | [5] |
Works of W. Harvey, M.D | |||||
Genuine Works of Hippocrates (2 volumes) | |||||
Essays on Puerperal Fever, and other Diseases Peculiar to Women | |||||
Works of Sydenham, translated from Latin (2 volumes) | Latin | ||||
Unzer and Prochaska on the Nervous System | |||||
Annals of Influenza | |||||
Romberg on Diseases of the Nervous System (2 volumes) | |||||
Manual of Human Histology (2 volumes) | Kölliker | George Busk and Thomas Huxley | German | 1853 | [6] |
Rokitansky's Pathological Anatomy (4 volumes) | |||||
Hunter on the Gravid Uterus with 34 plates | |||||
Wedl's Pathological Histology | |||||
Oesterlen's Medical Logic | |||||
Velpeau on Diseases of the Breast | |||||
Works of Arataeus, Greek and English | Greek |
Presidents
editIn the term 1849-1850, the society was presided by Sir James Clark.[7]
References
edit- ^ a b c Dunglison, Richard J. (December 1856). "The Sydenham Society of London". Atlanta Medical and Surgical Journal. 2 (4): 253. PMC 8846825. PMID 35825330.
- ^ a b c Aronson, Jeffrey K. (2022-12-16). "When I use a word . . . . Sydenham Societies". BMJ. 379: o3030. doi:10.1136/bmj.o3030. ISSN 1756-1833. PMID 36526274.
- ^ "Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free & Borrowable Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine". archive.org. Retrieved 2024-05-15.
- ^ Razi, Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariya; Greenhill, William Alexander; Todd, Robert Bentley; Sydenham Society; King's College London (1848). A treatise on the small-pox and measles [electronic resource]. Foyle Special Collections Library King's College London. London : Sydenham Society.
- ^ Schwann, Theodor (1847). Microscopical researches into the accordance in the structure and growth of animals and plants. Wellcome Library. London : [The Sydenham Society].
- ^ Kölliker, Albert; Busk, George; Huxley, Thomas Henry; Sydenham Society; Royal College of Physicians of London (1853). Manual of human histology. London Royal College of Physicians. London : Sydenham Society.
- ^ Sydenham Society (1846–49). Report of the general meeting. Gerstein - University of Toronto. London.