Special treatises on the medico-legal relations of insanity were published by Georget (1821), Falvet (1828), Esquirol (1838), and Marc (1840), and on midwifery by Capuron (1821).
Tardieu, Professor of Legal Medicine in the University of Paris (1861-79), published a most important series of monographs on hygienic and medico-legal subjects,[64] besides many papers, principally in the Annales d’Hygiène, etc., and testified before the courts in many “causes célébres.”
The first work of medico-legal interest to appear in Germany was the “Medicus-Politicus” of Rodericus à Castro, a Portuguese Jew living in Hamburg, printed in 1614, which deals principally with medical ethics and the relations of physicians, but contains chapters on simulated diseases, poisoning, wounds, drowning, and virginity.[65]
It was only toward the end of the seventeenth century that the subject was scientifically treated, and during the latter part of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth great progress was made in the development of forensic medicine in Germany. Johannes Bohn, one of the originators of the experimental method of investigation in physiological chemistry and physics, at the University of Leipzig, was also one of the earliest German contributors to the literature of legal medicine. Besides smaller works he published two noteworthy treatises: in 1689 a work on the examination of wounds and the distinction between ante-mortem and post-mortem wounds, and between death by injury, strangulation, and drowning.[66] In 1704 a work giving rules for the conduct of physicians in attending the sick and in giving evidence in the courts.[67] At about the same period M. B. Valentini, professor in the University of Giessen, published three important works, containing collections of medico-legal cases, and of the opinions and decisions of previous writers.[68] Another extensive collection of cases and decisions was published in 1706 by J. F. Zittmann, from a MS. left by Professor C. J. Lange, of the University of Leipzig;[69] and still another by J. S. Hasenest[70] appeared in 1755.
During the latter part of the eighteenth century, the Germans cultivated legal medicine assiduously, and a great number of works upon the subject were published. Among these may be mentioned those of M. Alberti, professor at the University of Halle;[71] H. F. Teichmeyer, of the University of Jena;[72] A. O. Gölicke, of the universities of Halle and Duisburg, who was the first to prepare a bibliography of the subject;[73] J. F. Fasel (Faselius), professor at Jena;[74] J. E. Hebenstreit and C. S. Ludwig, professors at Leipzig;[75] C. F. Daniel, of Halle;[76] J. D. Metzger, professor at Königsberg, the author of a number of works, one of which, a compendium, was translated into several other languages;[77] J. V. Müller, of Frankfurt;[78] J. C. T. Schlegel, who collected a series of more than forty dissertations by various writers;[79] M. M. Sikora, of Prague;[80] J. J. von Plenck, professor in Vienna, who published a work on forensic medicine and one on toxicology;[81] K. F. Uden, subsequently professor in St. Petersburg, who was the first to publish a periodical journal devoted to legal medicine, which was afterward continued by J. F. Pyl at Stendal;[82] and J. C. Fahner.[83]
At this period compends for students were published in Germany, which indicate by their number the extent to which this science was the subject of study. Among these those of Ludwig (1765), Kannegieser (1768), von Plenck (1781), Frenzel (1791), Loder (1791), Amemann (1793), Metzger (1800), and Roose may be mentioned.
The Germans of the present century have maintained the pre-eminence in legal medicine achieved by their forefathers. Among a great number of investigators and writers a few may be mentioned: C. F. L. Wildberg, professor at Rostock, was a most prolific writer, edited a journal devoted to state medicine, and contributed a valuable bibliography of the subject;[84] A. F. Hecker, professor at Erfurth and afterward at Berlin, and J. H. Kopp each edited and contributed extensively to a medico-legal journal.[85] A much more important periodical was established in 1821 by Adolph Henke, professor in Berlin, and was continuously published until 1864. Henke also wrote a great number of articles and a text-book on legal medicine.[86] Jos. Bernt, professor at Vienna, published a collection of cases, a systematic treatise, and a number of monographs,[87] as well as the MS. work left by his predecessor in the chair, F. B. Vietz. A handbook containing an excellent history of medico-legal science was published by L. J. C. Mende, professor at Griefswald,[88] who also contributed a number of monographs, chiefly on obstetrical subjects. K. W. N. Wagner contributed but little to the literature of the subject, but it was chiefly by his efforts, while professor in the University of Berlin, that a department for instruction in state medicine was established there in 1832. A. H. Nicolai, also professor at Berlin, published a handbook[89] besides numerous articles in the journals. F. J. Siebenhaar published an encyclopædia of legal medicine, and in 1842 established a journal devoted to state medicine, which in its continuations was published until 1872.[90] J. B. Friedreich, professor at Erlangen, after editing a journal devoted to state medicine from 1844 to 1849, established one of the most important of current medico-legal periodicals in 1850,[91] to both of which he was a frequent contributor until his death in 1862. Ludwig Choulant, professor at Dresden, and more widely known as the author of important contributions to the history of medicine, published two series of reports of medico-legal investigations.[92]
The foremost forensic physician of this period in Germany was unquestionably John Ludwig Casper, professor in the University of Berlin and “forensic physician” (gerichtlicher Physicus) to that city, who greatly extended the department established in the university under Wagner. He made innumerable investigations, some of which are preserved in several collections of cases,[93] others in his classic Handbook,[94] and still others in the periodical which he established in 1852, and which is now the most important current medico-legal journal.[95]
It is necessary in this place to make mention of one work by living authors, as its appearance marked a new departure in medico-legal literature, and as in it the fact that forensic medicine extends over so wide a field of inquiry as to require treatment at the hands of specialists was first recognized. To Josef von Maschka, professor in the University of Prague, the credit is due of having been the first to produce, with the collaboration of twenty-two colleagues, a truly systematic work on modern forensic medicine.[96]
English works upon this subject did not exist prior to the present century,[97] although physicians were employed by the courts to determine medical questions of fact at a much earlier date. Paris and Fonblanque, in the third Appendix of their “Medical Jurisprudence,” give the text of reports by the Colleges of Physicians of London and of Edinburgh concerning the cause of death as early as 1632 and 1687 respectively.[98]