ARCHIVES

 

These items have been transferred from the Home page and elsewhere and are available through the search function. Some are referenced on other pages.

Links in the archive section are not regularly checked.

 

Archived 10 October 2022

11th Symposium of the International Society for the History of Radiology

 

Prof. Dr. Andrzej Urbanik, Head of the Chair and Department of Radiology Medical College of the Jagiellonian University, Past President of the Polish Medical Society of Radiology, invites the members of ISHRAD and of course all of you interested in the history of radiology, to participate in the 11th Symposium of ISHRAD.

This event takes place in Krakow, Poland from Friday 7 to Saturday 8 October 2022.

http://ishrad.org/11th-symposium-of-the-international-society-for-the-history-of-radiology

 

Archived 22 December 2021 

Report on the British Society for the History of Radiology Annual lecture 2021 

The video of the complete lecture is now available on Youtube. Click here to watch.

 

By Dr Arpan K Banerjee Past Chair and current trustee BSHR

Due to the current Covid pandemic this year’s annual lecture was delivered as a virtual event on Monday 8 Feb 2021. Dr Uwe Busch a distinguished radiology historian , author and the current director of the Rontgen Museum in Remscheid – Lennep , Germany delivered a talk entitled ‘New results on biographical research on W C Rontgen’ .

The first half of the talk was devoted to the Rontgen family tree and we learnt about his ancestors who were successful cloth merchants. Lennep was a small town whose history goes back to the 12 th century and many were farmers in this Bergishland region and then worked in the cloth trade before industrialisation occurred. We were given a detailed review of Rontgen’s lineage. Rontgen was born in the house bought by his grandfather which today has been preserved for posterity.

In the second half of the talk research from Rontgen’s estate and collections in the Rontgen museum were presented. Rontgen left behind over 1800 letters and documents as well as around 2000 glass plates. Of particular interest was his first paper on X-Rays and the people he sent this paper to which included the great and the good of the physicists of his era. In the UK, Arthur Schuster from Manchester and Lord Rayleigh and J J Thompson ( discoverer of the electron ) at Cambridge and Lord Kelvin in Glasgow were all on his list of recipients.

This section of the talk also covered his marriage to Bertha and included illustrations from Rontgen’s extensive photograph collection. Photography was a major hobby of Rontgen’s and the pictures of old Wurzburg which were shown to the audience were a wonderful evocation of what the place was like in his era.

The lecture was well received by the virtual on line audience and Dr Busch was thanked for his wonderful, scholarly informative presentation.

   

 

Archived 3 August 2021

BBC World Service Forum  3 June 2021 -- X-rays: New ways of seeing

 

The discovery of X-rays by the German scientist Wilhelm Roentgen in 1895 was nothing short of ground-breaking, opening up a new era in medicine. For the first time, doctors could see inside the human body without the need for surgery, and diagnose many more living patients.

X-rays had major implications for physics as well, allowing scientists to study the structure and arrangement of molecules. Within wider society, they inspired artists to explore what these new rays could tell us about the representation of reality. It wasn’t long before X-rays were being used to scan baggage, in airport security and even in shoe shops to measure feet before exposure to radiation was properly understood. Huge strides in X-ray technology have given us the type of modern scans that are used today to detect conditions such as cancer.

Joining Bridget Kendall are Drs Adrian Thomas and Arpan Banerjee, both radiologists who’ve collaborated on publications about the history of X-rays, and artist Susan Aldworth who’s used brain scans in her work to investigate the nature of identity.

Listen to the recording at https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct1rl6

 

 

 

 

The British Society for the History of Medicine Biennial Congress -- archived 31/5/21

Diamond Building – The University of Sheffield

Wednesday 15th - Saturday 18th September 2021

Key themes

History of Medicine in the Workplace

History of Pandemics

History of Nursing

Innovation in Medical Engineering

Abstract submissions on these themes and General Topics are welcome. The closing date for receipt of abstracts is the 31st May 2021. If research has been delayed owing to restricted access to libraries, archives or other resources, this may be stated in abstract submissions where relevant.

For Congress information and booklet, registration, abstract submission and accommodation please go to https://bshm.org.uk/congress-2021/

 

WEBINAR THURSDAY 2 JULY 2020  -- archived 26/5/21

Presentations selected from the submitted abstracts on the history of imaging(click title for slides):

History and evolution of Artificial Intelligence - Elizabeth Beckmann, Chair, BSHR and Director, Lanmark

Early chest radiology pioneers and the beginnings of chest radiology - Dr Arpan K Banerjee, Retired Consultant Radiologist

Miss Marion Frank (1920 - 2011) "I have never been a good radiographer, but I knew how to get out of trouble" - Dr Adrian Thomas, Consulting Radiologist, Canterbury Christ Church University

Kathleen Clara Clark (1896-1968) and the need for standardisation - Dr Adrian Thomas, Consulting Radiologist, Canterbury Christ Church University

 

RECENT INTEREST archived 26/5/21

Report of the 8th meeting of the International Society of the History of Radiology (ISHRAD) in Brussels 28 Sep 2019

“Reflections on the International Day of Radiology” – a paper by Arpan Banerjee on the Oxford Medicine website

Review of Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen: The Birth of Radiology, Rosenbusch, de Knecht-van Eekelen

Francis Duck. Scope 29(2) Summer 2020. 32–35  ‘The Radium Boss - The life and times of Sidney Russ.’

Edwin Aird. Scope 29(3) Autumn 2020. 22-25. The Gray Laboratory Pt.I.

Past issues of SCOPE have featured several other articles of interest. These issues may be browsed free through this link