Palla Ákos szerk.: Az Országos Orvostörténeti Könyvtár közleményei 10-11. (Budapest, 1958)

practical dentistry was inaugurated by the activity of the French barber and chirurgeon Ambroise Paré (1520—1590) and the publi­cation of his book. Egyptians, Etruscans, Phoenicians, Greeks, Hebrews and Romans used to replace missing teeth by teeth of animals fixed with golden wires. A special chapter deals with the Parisian Pierre Fauchard (1678—1761) and his book published in 1728. Porcelain teeth were invented by Fonzi, a Parisien dental sur­geon of Italian origin (1808) while with the invention and utiliza­tion of vulcanized caoutchouc in the middle of the 19th century the substitution of teeth came within everybody's reach.

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