Record

RefNoAP/10/2
LevelItem
TitleUnpublished paper, 'The Croonian Lecture, on the influence of the nervous system on the action of the muscles in general, and of the heart in particular' by B C [Benjamin Collins] Brodie
Date[1813]
DescriptionThis paper is Brodie's Croonian Lecture for 1813. He recounts experiments on the action of the heart muscle, deducing that when the heart is suddenly emptied of blood, it continues to pulse for a longer period than it does when respiration ceases, causing Brodie to form the theory that the action of the heart is linked more closely to the nervous system than to the circulation of blood.

An ink inscription at top of first page reads 'Ordered to be printed, but withdrawn by the author'. Deletions and corrections appear throughout in ink.

Subject: Physiology

Read 11 November 1813.

The Croonian Medal and Lecture is the Royal Society's premier lecture in the biological sciences. The lectureship was conceived by William Croone, one of the original Fellows of the Society. Among the papers left on his death in 1684 were plans to endow two lectureships, one at the Royal Society and the other at the Royal College of Physicians. His widow later bequeathed the means to carry out the scheme. The lecture series began in 1738.
Extent36p
FormatManuscript
PhysicalDescriptionInk on paper
Digital imagesView item on Science in the Making
AccessStatusOpen
Fellows associated with this archive
CodePersonNameDates
NA8147Brodie; Sir; Benjamin Collins (1783 - 1862); surgeon1783 - 1862
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