<Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mondino dei Luzzi . </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mondino dei Luzzi . </Td> </Tr> <P> Mondino de Luzzi, or de Liuzzi or de Lucci, (ca . 1270--1326), also known as Mundinus, was an Italian physician, anatomist and professor of surgery, who lived and worked in Bologna . He is often credited as the restorer of anatomy because he made seminal contributions to the field by reintroducing the practice of public dissection of human cadavers and writing the first modern anatomical text . </P> <P> He was born around 1270 into the prominent Florentine de Luzzi family with loyalties to the Ghibellines and inscribed to the Società dei Toschi, a medieval institution of Bologna for people from Tuscany . His father, Nerino, and grandfather Albizzio were both pharmacists in Bologna, and his uncle Luzio (also Liuzzo or Lucio) was a professor of Medicine . Mondino studied at the University of Bologna in the College of Medicine and the College of Philosophy, graduated around 1290, and he was employed as a public lecturer in practical medicine and surgery at the university from 1306 to 1324 . During his schooling, Mondino was a pupil of Thaddeus of Florence (Taddeo Alderotti), who made significant contributions to the development of medicine at Bologna, and a fellow student of Henri de Monteville . In addition to his achievements as an anatomist, Mondino was highly regarded as a diplomat . He was involved in city government and served as an Ambassador of Bologna to John, the son of King Robert of Naples . Mondino died in Bologna in 1326 and was buried in the parochial church of San Vitale e Agricola along with his uncle Leuzzo, who was also a lecturer in medicine . His granite tomb is adorned with a bas - relief, sculpted by Boso of Parma, which depicts an instructor seated in a large chair lecturing to students . </P>

Who is credited as the restorer of anatomy