First veterinary school
The first known veterinary practice was in 9,000 BC in the Middle East. Sheep herders used primitive medical skills to treat their animals, which included the dogs that watched over their herds. Between 4,000 – 3,000 BC in Egypt, medical treatment of animals became more common, but was still largely undeveloped. Ancient humans began domesticating cats, fowl, and dogs, and their owners considered them as members of their household.
In approximately 1,900 BC, someone captured the first written accounts of veterinary medicine in four sacred Hindu texts. Millennia later, in 1850, archaeologists discovered fragments of an ancient veterinary medical textbook made of papyrus. This text covers diseases relating to birds, cattle, dogs, and fish. Horses were the primary focus of ancient medical care as they were economically important for transportation, agriculture, and trade.
In the 1760s, Claude Bourgelat established the first school of veterinary medicine in Lyon, France. With the opening of the school in France, the scientific study of veterinary medicine was officially born.
Info source: https://www.ovrs.com/blog/history-of-veterinary-medicine/
Image source: https://www.universityplacevet.com/

This makes no sense: "medical treatment of animals became more common, but was still fully discovered". Correct it so that it's clear what you had in mind.
OdpowiedzUsuńThank You for correction
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