Vesalius, however, was of a different character. His declared that teachers “prattled arrogantly from the pulpit about things they had never seen”, and adopted the motto ‘per ocules, non per aures’ (learn by seeing, not through hearing). The day after graduation from Padua University, in Italy, he was appointed as professor and proceeded to spend long hours examining the inside of corpses for medical truth. His thirst for anatomy (‘furor anatomicus’) was such that he took great risks to acquire ever more specimens, famously procuring a dead body of a criminal for a complete skeleton, by stealing into the gallows late at night. His work capacity was equally enormous, and with the publication of his monumental text De Humanis Corporis Fabricus (The Fabric of the Human Body), which contained detailed anatomical drawings of all body parts, Vesalius single-handedly proved that much of Galen’s work was wrong or based on animals. In doing so, he truly brought medicine into the age of rational enquiry. His work represents the watershed between medieval and modern medicine. Desired all over Europe for his skills as a physician, Vesalius chose to go into service for Emperor Charles V of Spain. He had many adventures in this capacity, including as an army physician in a war against the French, for whom Ambrose Pare was making his discoveries aided by Vesalius’ book. Vesalius died in a shipwreck returning from a journey to the Holy Land.