French disease: Syphilis. Depending upon someone's thoughts as to where the disease came from, syphilis was also known as the Italian, Spanish, German and Polish disease. The name "syphilis" was coined by Hieronymus Fracastorius (Girolamo Fracastoro). Fracastorius was a true Renaissance man; he
wrote on the temperature of wines, the rise of the Nile, poetry, the
mind, and the soul; he was an astronomer, geographer, botanist,
mathematician, philosopher and, last but not least in the present
context, a physician. In 1530 he published the
poem "Syphilis sive morbus gallicus" (Syphilis or the French Disease)
in which the name of the disease first appeared. Perhaps more
importantly, Fracastorius went on in 1546 to write "On Contagion"
("De contagione et contagiosis morbis et curatione"), the first known
discussion of the phenomenon of contagious infection: a landmark in
the history of infectious disease.