Image Source: upload. Abbey of Monte Cassino: St. Norman [email protected]. The original medical school closed hundreds of years ago, but Salerno is still a place of learning. Since then it has become a major Italian university with faculties being added over the years and the number of students growing rapidly. The majority of the university buildings are spread across the Fisciano and Baronissi campuses in the green, rural surroundings of the Irno valley.
As well as academic and administrative buildings the campuses boast museum, laboratories, restaurants and coffee bars ensuring there is plenty to do between lectures. The university currently has around 15 departments offering a wide range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses to students from across Italy and the wider world. Handerson, H. The school of Salernum. New York: s. Harrington, John. Packard; and a Note on the prehistory of the Regimen sanitatis, by Fielding H.
New York: Hoeber. Kristeller, P. The school of Salerno: Its development and its contribution to the history of learning. Bulletin of the History of Medicine , 17 , — Nutton, V. Ancient medicine. London: Routledge. Velia and the school of Salerno. Medical History , 15 , 1— Ordronaux, J.
Regimen sanitatis salernitanum. Code of health of the school of Salernum. Philadelphia: J. A direct link across the centuries can be hypothesized between the traditional Salerno medicine of the Lombard Age and older medical practice of the Greek —Roman period which puts Salerno in first place, rather than its contender Bologna, for having the oldest university established in Europe. Having obtained its first legal recognition in the Constitutions of Melfi and the title of Studium in the time of Conrad II, the Salerno medical school received its first statute from Charles of Anjou Later, Queen Jeanne formally recognised the legal value of the certification given to graduating doctors , thus breaking the monopoly held until then by the Study of Naples, set up by Frederick II in
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