• <samp id="ossg8"></samp>
    <tbody id="ossg8"><nobr id="ossg8"></nobr></tbody>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"><strong id="ossg8"></strong></menuitem>
  • <samp id="ossg8"></samp>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"><strong id="ossg8"></strong></menuitem>
  • <menuitem id="ossg8"><ins id="ossg8"></ins></menuitem>

  • <tbody id="ossg8"><nobr id="ossg8"></nobr></tbody>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"></menuitem>
        Skip Navigation Links
        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
         CDC Home Search Health Topics A-Z

        Preventing Chronic Disease: Public Health Research, Practice and Policy

        View Current Issue
        Issue Archive
        Archivo de n鷐eros en espa駉l








        Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
        MMWR


         Home 

        Volume 3: No. 2, April 2006

        About This Image


        Cover of the April 2006 issue
        Return to TABLE OF CONTENTS

        Robert Burton’s influential The Anatomy of Melancholy attributed overall physical and mental health to the balance of the four humours, fluids believed to permeate the body. Burton’s concept of the four humours dates back to Hippocrates, whose precept of the rule of harmony included his theory that an imbalance among the humours — blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile — resulted in pain and disease, an idea that formed the basis of medicine through the Renaissance. Galen, a Greek physician of the second century, introduced four temperaments corresponding to each humour, which were adopted and expanded in Elizabethan and Renaissance art and medicine. Blood equated to a sanguine temperament characterized as optimistic and passionate; phlegm to a phlegmatic temperament that was unemotional or dull; yellow bile to a choleric temperament characterized as quick-tempered and willful; and black bile to a melancholic temperament of depression and despondency. The cover art for this issue is a treatment of these four types based on an illustration from Le grant kalendrier et compost des bergiers avecq leur astrologie et plusieurs aultres choses, or The Shepherd’s Calendar, printed by Nicolas Le Rouge in the late 15th century.

        Cover artist: Kristen Immoor
        Send feedback to artist

         



         



        The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors’ affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.


         Home 

        Privacy Policy | Accessibility

        CDC Home | Search | Health Topics A-Z

        This page last reviewed October 25, 2011
        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
        National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
         HHS logoUnited States Department of
        Health and Human Services



         
        国产精品久久久久久一级毛片