Category
page 114th-century women medical doctors
Dorotea Bucca
Italian physician

Abella
Abella, often known as Abella of Salerno or Abella of Castellomata, was a physician in the mid fourteenth century. Abella studied and taught at the Salerno School of Medicine. Abella is believed to have been born around 1380, but the exact time of her birth and death is unclear. Abella lectured on standard medical practices, bile, and women's health and nature at the medical school in Salerno. Abella, along with Rebecca de Guarna, specialized in the area of embryology. She published two treatises: De atrabile (On Black Bile) and De natura seminis humani (on the Nature of the Seminal Fluid), ne
Jacqueline Felice de Almania
Italian physician
Mercuriade
Mercuriade (14th century) was an Italian physician, surgeon and medical author. She is one of the few woman physicians known from the Middle Ages.

Sara de Sancto Aegidio
French physician
Adelmota of Carrara
14th-century Italian physician

Fava of Manosque
Jewish physician and surgeon known to practice medicine in the early 14th century in Provence, France

Dame Péronelle
French herbalist (fl. 1292–1319)