Download full text
(external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.12957/revmar.2020.48589
Exports for your reference manager
Abelhas ou Zangões: as primeiras normas para o profissional da farmácia do Brasil no início do século XIX
Bees or Bumblebees: the first regulations for brazilian pharmacy professionals in the early 19th century
[journal article]
Abstract This paper aims to present the first results of a research that has been developed in the scope of the doctorate about the institutionalization of pharmacy in Brazil in the 19th century - more specifically between 1808 and 1891, that is, from the first medical and pharmaceutical classes. in surgery ... view more
This paper aims to present the first results of a research that has been developed in the scope of the doctorate about the institutionalization of pharmacy in Brazil in the 19th century - more specifically between 1808 and 1891, that is, from the first medical and pharmaceutical classes. in surgery schools until the creation of the first Faculty of Pharmacy in Brazilian territory. One of the proposals of this research is to investigate the construction and the regularization of the professional of the graduated and licensed pharmacy, according to the requirements of the time. In this way, this article seeks to analyze what the first laws aimed at pharmacy professionals predicted, and how they would have contributed so that the "true pharmacists" could be identified and differentiated from others who, although producing and selling medicines and, consequently, were part of the scenario of the 19th century carioca pharmacy, were not regulated and, under... view less
Classification
History
Free Keywords
Pharmacy; Brazilian Pharmaceutical Code; History of Science; Twentieth Century
Document language
Portuguese
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 200-212
Journal
Revista Maracanan (2020) 25
ISSN
2359-0092
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0