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Gilles, de Corbeil, fl 1200 (French royal physician, teacher, and poet)

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1200

Biography

Gilles de Corbeil was a French royal physician, teacher, and poet. He was born in Corbeil-Essonnes in approximately 1140 and died in the first quarter of the 13th century. He is the author of four medical poems and a scathing anti-clerical satire, all in Latin dactylic hexameters. He wrote two poems for students: De urinis and De pulsibus, on urine and on Galenic theories of the pulse.

Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:

De pulsibus, by Aegidius Corboliensis, 1481

 Part
Identifier: MS 169/ff. 87v-97v
Contents Ff. 87-97 of MS 169 contain the treatise, De pulsibus, by the French royal physician, Gilles de Corbeil (known by the Latinisation of his name, 'Aegidius Corboliensis '). As well as a 12th-13th century royal physician, Gilles was dedicated to Academic medicine in France, and promoted the Salernitian school. As a teacher of medicine, he composed two poems for students, the De urinis and De...
Dates: 1481

Pulses by Giles of Corbeil with gloss, 13th century

 Part
Identifier: MS 173/ff. 1r-8v
Contents The first eight folios of MS 173 contain the verses on pulses by the twelfth to thirteenth-century French poet and physician, Giles of Corbeil (also known as Aegidius Corboliensis). Giles was educated at the medical school of Salerno, the first and one of the most renowned schools for medical knowledge in Western Europe throughout the Middle Ages. Giles returned to Paris in the late twelfth century and became a teacher, canon of Notre Dame and also court physician to King Phillip II. Giles'...
Dates: 13th century