| Name |
Century |
Ethnicity |
Known for
|
| Abascantus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
invented antidote against serpent bites
|
| Fabiola
|
4th century CE
|
Roman
|
First hospital in Latin Christendom was founded by Fabiola at Rome.[1]
|
| Ephrem the Syrian
|
4th century CE
|
Roman
|
Opened a hospital at Edessa[1] They spread out and specialized nosocomia for the sick, brephotrophia for foundlings, orphanotrophia for orphans, ptochia for the poor, xenodochia for poor or infirm pilgrims, and gerontochia for the old
|
| Basil of Caesarea
|
4th century CE
|
Roman
|
Founded at Caesarea in Cappadocia an institution (hospital) called Basileias, with several buildings for patients, nurses, physicians, workshops, and schools.[1]
|
| Aemilia Hilaria |
4th century CE |
Roman |
female physician. Wrote books on gynecology and obstetrics.
|
| Aeschrion of Pergamon |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
pharmaceutist
|
| Agathinus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
founder of the Eclectic school of medicine
|
| Albucius |
1st century CE |
Roman |
wealthy physician, with annual income of 250,000 sesterces
|
| Alcon (classical history) |
1st century CE |
Greek |
surgeon
|
| Andromachus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Anonymus Londinensis |
1st century CE |
Greek |
author of the physiological work On Medicine
|
| Antipater |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
gave an account of the morbid symptoms that precede death
|
| Antiphanes of Delos |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
"the sole cause of diseases in man was the too great variety of his food"
|
| Antonius Castor |
1st century CE |
Roman |
herbal remedies
|
| Antyllus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
surgeon, treatment of aneurysms became standard until the 19th century
|
| Apollonius Claudius |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Cyprius |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Organicus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Pergamenus |
3rd century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Pitaneus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Senior |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Tarensis |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Apollonius Ther |
1st century CE |
Greek |
|
| Dridhabala
|
2nd century CE
|
India
|
edited the Charaka Samhita
|
| Archigenes |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
very high reputation for his professional skill
|
| Arcyon |
1st century CE |
Greek |
surgeon
|
| Aretaeus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
general treatise on diseases
|
| Asclepiades Pharmacion |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
skill and knowledge of pharmacy
|
| Aspasia the Physician |
4th century CE |
Greek |
Female gynecologist
|
| Athenaeus of Attalia |
1st century CE |
Greek |
founder of the Pneumatic school of medicine
|
| Cassius Felix |
3rd century CE |
Roman African |
medical writer
|
| Aulus Cornelius Celsus |
1st century CE |
Roman |
De Medicina
|
| Charmis |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
Physician active in Rome
|
| Saints Cosmas and Damian |
3rd century CE |
Arab |
persecuted by Diocletian
|
| Crinas |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
Physician active in Rome
|
| Criton of Heraclea |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
Chief physician of emperor Trajan
|
| Damocrates |
1st century CE |
Greek |
wrote pharmaceutical works in Greek iambic verse
|
| Demosthenes Philalethes |
1st century CE |
Greek |
author of the Ophthalmicus, the most influential work of ophthalmology in antiquity
|
| Saint Diomedes |
3rd century CE |
Greek |
arrested by Diocletian
|
| Pedanius Dioscorides |
1st century CE |
Greek |
De Materia Medica
|
| Dong Feng |
3rd century CE |
Chinese |
|
| Erotianus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
Collection of Hippocratic Words
|
| Eudemus (physician) |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
two persons, the first the poisoner of Drusus Julius Caesar, the second an acquaintance of Galen
|
| Saint Fabiola |
4th century CE |
Roman |
nurse
|
| Gaius Stertinius Xenophon |
1st century CE |
Greek |
personal physician of emperor Claudius
|
| Galen |
2nd–3rd century CE |
Greek |
developer of anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, and neurology
|
| Ge Hong |
4th century CE |
Chinese |
originator of First Aid in TCM
|
| Heliodorus |
1st century CE |
Greek |
wrote on medical technique
|
| Herodotus (physician) |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
Two doctors, the first a Pneumaticist, the second an Empiricist
|
| Hua Tuo |
2nd century CE |
Chinese |
abilities in acupuncture, moxibustion, herbal medicine and medical Daoyin exercises
|
| Huangfu Mi |
3rd century CE |
Chinese |
compiled the Canon of Acupuncture and Moxibustion
|
| Ji Ben |
3rd century CE |
Chinese |
physician who started a failed rebellion
|
| Leonidas (physician) |
2nd–3rd century CE |
Greek |
surgical writer, provided the first detailed description of a mastectomy
|
| Leoparda |
4th century CE |
Greek |
female gynecologist
|
| Marcellus of Side |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
wrote a long medical poem
|
| Quintus Gargilius Martialis |
3rd century CE |
Roman |
writer on horticulture, botany and medicine
|
| Menemachus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
Methodic school of medicine
|
| Menodotus of Nicomedia |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
Empiricist
|
| Metrodora |
4th century CE |
Greek |
female gynecologist, author of On the Diseases and Cures of Women.
|
| Oribasius |
4th century CE |
Greek |
medical writer and person physician of Julian the Apostate
|
| Paccius Antiochus |
1st century CE |
Roman |
wealthy commercial physician
|
| Philagrius of Epirus |
3rd century CE |
Greek |
medical writers
|
| Philonides (physician) |
1st century CE |
Greek |
author of De Medicina
|
| Philumenus |
3rd century CE |
Greek |
|
| Aelius Promotus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
author of Medicinalium Formularum Collectio
|
| Rufus of Ephesus |
1st–2nd century CE |
Greek |
wrote treatises on dietetics, pathology, anatomy, and patient care
|
| Serenus Sammonicus |
3rd century CE |
Roman |
author of a didactic medical poem Liber Medicinalis
|
| Scribonius Largus |
1st century CE |
Roman |
court physician to the Roman emperor Claudius
|
| Sextius Niger |
1st century CE |
Roman |
author of the pharmacologist work On material
|
| Sextus Empiricus |
2nd century CE |
Roman |
|
| Sextus Placitus |
4th century CE |
Roman |
author of Libri medicinae Sexti Placiti Papyriensis ex animalibus pecoribus et bestiis vel avibus Concordantiae
|
| Soranus of Ephesus |
2nd century CE |
Greek |
author of treatise on gynecology and On Acute and Chronic Diseases
|
| Theodorus Priscianus |
4th century CE |
Roman |
author of Medical Matters in Four Books
|
| Vagbhata
|
4th century CE
|
Indian
|
He is considered to be "The Trinity" of Ayurvedic knowledge
|
| Thessalus of Tralles |
1st century CE |
Roman |
Methodic school of medicine, court physician of Emperor Nero
|
| Xenocrates of Aphrodisias |
1st century CE |
Greek |
pharmaceutical writer, including On Useful Things from Living Beings
|
| Zhang Zhongjing |
2nd-3rd century CE |
Chinese |
made great contributions to the development of Traditional Chinese Medicine
|
| Zopyrus (physician) |
1st century CE |
Greek |
antidote inventor
|