Academic medical dissertation on wine, from its history to adulteration tests.
Langheinrich, Henricus Adolphus
De Vinis
Dissertatio Inauguralis Medica.
1823, Berlin, Formis Bruschckianis
First Edition
Overview
Pamphlet published a inaugural dissertation submitted to the University of Berlin for the highest honors in medicine and surgery by Langheinrich, on the topic of wine as medical remedy. The dissertation ranges across viticultural history, fermentation, the medical efficacy and harms of wine, and forensic questions of artificial alteration and adulteration. It combines oenological and toxicological perspectives and cites Rozier, Fabbroni, Thenard, and Hahnemann.
Inside the book
The dissertation unites classical learning, contemporary chemical discussion, and medical theory. The text opens with wine history (references to Noah, Georgia and Armenia, Syria, Egypt, Homeric vineyards), and the vine's spread into Germany and Gaul; then treats production and fermentation (ripe grapes, must, carbonic gas) and the diversity of wines by locality, cultivation, storage, age, and Galenic qualities. it moves into medical efficacy with citations to Homer, Plato, Galen, Pliny, and Avicenna. Later sections treat artificial improvement and a forensic chapter on adulteration (arsenic, corrosive sublimate, alum, vegetable colourants, brandy, aromatics, belladonna, excess sulphur) with detection methods; the dissertation concludes with the author's curriculum vitae.
Why La Fenice chose it
A Latin medical dissertation rooted in ancient history and myth, chemistry, medical authorities old and new, and decidedly modern tests for adulteration.
Condition Report
Pp. 44
Modern grey paper tape holds the pamphlet together; no covers. Ownership stamp of Dr. Bassermann-Jordan (Deidesheim) to the title page, with his ex libris on the verso. Slight foxing throughout. Good copy.
Dimensions (inches): 7 x 4 3/4 x 1/8
About the author
Henricus Adolphus Langheinrich (b. 1798), German medical scholar trained at Leipzig and Berlin.