The History of Medicine, The Middle Ages
The History of Medicine, The Middle Ages
The History of Medicine, The Middle Ages
of
THE
MEDICINE
HISTORY
of
MEDICINE
THE MIDDLE AGES
5001450
KATE KELLY
THE
THE MIDDLE AGES: 5001450 Copyright 2009 by Kate Kelly All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information contact: Facts On File, Inc. An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kelly, Kate, 1958 The Middle Ages: 5001450 / Kate Kelly. p. cm.(The history of medicine) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN: 978-0-8160-7206-4 (hardcover) ISBN: 978-1-4381-2625-8 (e-book) 1. Medicine, Medieval. I. Title. R141.K45 2010 610.94'0902dc22 2008048709 Facts On File books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. You can nd Facts On File on the World Wide Web at http://www.factson le.com Text design by Annie ODonnell Illustrations by Bobbi McCutcheon Photo research by Elizabeth H. Oakes Printed in the United States of America Bang Hermitage 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on acid-free paper.
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Preface Acknowledgments Introduction viii xii xiii
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Types of Gardens Religious Healing Mouth Pain and Toothaches: Diagnosis and Treatment Mental Illnesses: Diagnosis and Treatment Conclusion
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73 75 76 78 79 82 83 84
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The Value of Personal Cleanliness Public Health and Safety Laws Conclusion
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PREFACE
Youhavetoknowthepasttounderstandthepresent. American scientist Carl Sagan (193496)
he history of medicine offers a fascinating lens through which to view humankind. Maintaining good health, overcoming disease, and caring for wounds and broken bones was as impor- tant to primitive people as it is to us today, and every civilization participated in efforts to keep its population healthy. As scientists continue to study the past, they are finding more and more infor- mation about how early civilizations coped with health problems, and they are gaining greater understanding of how health practi- tioners in earlier times made their discoveries. This information contributes to our understanding today of the science of medicine and healing. In many ways, medicine is a very young science. Until the mid- 19th century, no one knew of the existence of germs, so as a result, any solutions that healers might have tried could not address the root cause of many illnesses. Yet for several thousand years, medi- cine has been practiced, often quite successfully. While progress in any field is never linear (very early, nothing was written down; later, it may have been written down, but there was little intra- community communication), readers will see that some civiliza- tions made great advances in certain health-related areas only to see the knowledge forgotten or ignored after the civilization faded. Two early examples of this are Hippocrates patient-centered heal- ing philosophy and the amazing contributions of the Romans to public health through water-delivery and waste-removal systems. This knowledge was lost and had to be regained later. The six volumes in the History of Medicine set are written to stand alone, but combined, the set presents the entire sweep of the history of medicine. It is written to put into perspective
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Preface ix
for high school students and the general public how and when various medical discoveries were made and how that information affected health care of the time period. The set starts with primi- tive humans and concludes with a final volume that presents read- ers with the very vital information they will need as they must answer societys questions of the future about everything from understanding ones personal risk of certain diseases to the ethics of organ transplants and the increasingly complex questions about preservation of life. Each volume is interdisciplinary, blending discussions of the history, biology, chemistry, medicine and economic issues and pub- lic policy that are associated with each topic. Early Civilizations, the first volume, presents new research about very old cultures because modern technology has yielded new information on the study of ancient civilizations. The healing practices of primitive humans and of the ancient civilizations in India and China are outlined, and this volume describes the many contributions of the Greeks and Romans, including Hippocrates patient-centric approach to illness and how the Romans improved public health. The Middle Ages addresses the religious inuence on the prac- tice of medicine and the eventual growth of universities that pro- vided a medical education. During the Middle Ages, sanitation became a major issue, and necessity eventually drove improve- ments to public health. Women also made contributions to the medical field during this time. The Middle Ages describes the manner in which medieval society coped with the Black Death (bubonic plague) and leprosy, as illustrative of the medical think- ing of this era. The volume concludes with information on the golden age of Islamic medicine, during which considerable medical progress was made. The Scientic Revolution and Medicine describes how disease ourished because of an increase in population, and the book describes the numerous discoveries that were an important aspect of this time. The volume explains the progress made by Andreas Vesalius (151464) who transformed Western concepts of the structure of the human body; William Harvey (15781657), who
Preface xi
terms and concepts, a helpful list of Internet resources, and an array of historical and current print sources for further research. Photographs, tables, and line art accompany the text. I am a science and medical writer with the good fortune to be assigned this set. For a number of years I have written books in collaboration with physicians who wanted to share their medi- cal knowledge with laypeople, and this has provided an excel- lent background in understanding the science and medicine of good health. In addition, I am a frequent guest at middle and high schools and at public libraries addressing audiences on the history of U.S. presidential election days, and this regular experience with students keeps me fresh when it comes to understanding how best to convey information to these audiences. What is happening in the world of medicine and health tech- nology today may affect the career choices of many, and it will affect the health care of all, so the topics are of vital importance. In addition, the public health policies under consideration (what medicines to develop, whether to permit stem cell research, what health records to put online, and how and when to use what types of technology, etc.) will have a big impact on all people in the future. These subjects are in the news daily, and students who can turn to authoritative science volumes on the topic will be better prepared to understand the story behind the news.
AcKnoWledgMentS
his book as well as the others in the set was made possible because of the guidance, inspiration, and advice offered by many generous individuals who have helped me better understand science and medicine and their histories. I would like to express my heartfelt appreciation to Frank Darmstadt, whose vision and enthusiastic encouragement, patience, and support helped shape the series and saw it through to completion. Thank you, too, to the Facts On File staff members who worked on this set. The line art and the photographs for the entire set were provided by two very helpful professionalsartist Bobbi McCutcheon provided all the line art; she frequently reached out to me from her office in Juneau, Alaska, to offer very welcome advice and support as we worked through the complexities of the renderings. A very warm thank you to Elizabeth Oakes for finding a wealth of wonderful photographs that helped bring the information to life. Carol Sailors got me off to a great start, and Carole Johnson kept me sane by providing able help on the back matter of all the books. Agent Bob Diforio has remained steadfast in his shepherding of the work. I also want to acknowledge the wonderful archive collections that have provided information for the book. Without places like the Sophia Smith Collection at the Smith College Library, firsthand accounts of the Civil War battlefield treatment or reports such as Lillian Gilbreths on helping the disabled after World War I would be lost to history.
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INTRODUCTION
Nolepers,lunaticsorpersonshavingthefallingsickness orothercontagiousdisease,andnopregnantwomen,or suckinginfantsandnointolerablepersons,eventhough theybepoorandinfi rm,aretobeadmitted. Stated Rules of St. Johns Hospital, Bridgwater, England, 1210
he fall of the Roman Empire set off a chain of events that affected all aspects of progress during the Middle Ages, includ- ing medical progress. In the West, any sort of patientcentric care that had developed during earlier times was swallowed up by folk medicine that featured astrological analysis and experimentation with various plants and herbs. Added to these approaches were healing prayers, magic spells, and various forms of mysticism. The Eastern Empire split from the Roman Empire in 286 C.E., so development in the East occurred independently from what was happening in the West. The Western Empire was mired in eco- nomic and political difficulties, but the Byzantine Empire devel- oped into a successful civilization that maintained an organized practice of medicine. Had Galen and Hippocrates not been adapted and translated by Arab scholars for use in the East, their teach- ings might have disappeared. Later on, the inhabitants of the West began to appreciate that the Islamic people had a better under- standing of health and wellness, and eventually these medical phi- losophies spread back to the West where they had originated. The Middle Ages: 5001450 focuses on medical developments during the time period of the years 5001450. During the early Middle Ages (529800) and the middle time period (ca. 800 1100), the rise of Christianity had a definite effect on the prac- tice of medicine. Pope Gregory (ca. 540604) stressed that prayer was more important than medicine, and over time, that sentiment xiii
Introduction xv
shaving-related cuts and nicks, and this knowledge brought people with injuries to barbers for help and advice. Eventually barbersurgeons became an acknowledged specialty. Women were important in the practice of medieval medicine. They were the constants of the community, and their knowledge grew with experience. Chapter 5 outlines womens contributions to medicine and some of the prominent women practitioners are profiled for their accomplishments. Chapter 6 addresses the early public health laws and practices. From ways to bring in clean water to methods for getting rid of waste, the medieval people made progress in some areas but took steps back in others. When the Black Death occurred in Europe in the 14th century, Europeans were still relying on religious theories, and as a result about one-third of the population of Europe died from the plague. Chapter 7 examines how this devastating disease was handled by medieval communities and practitioners and why it was so lethal. Smallpox and leprosy were also major issues of the time, and these diseases are also discussed. Chapter 8 examines the contributions of the Byzantine Empire to the future of medicine, and introduces Ibn Sina (Avicenna), a physician whose contributions rank with Galen. Many of the healing methods used during the Middle Ages are very primitive by todays standards, and the people of that day still had no understanding of the role that germs played in disease. While there is no doubt that the heavy emphasis on prayer and pilgrimages as possible cures slowed the progress of medicine, medieval people still had to overcome illnesses and injuries, and in the process, discoveries were made. Some of the herbal cures used have stood the test of time, and while the surgical methods were primitive, the learning that was achieved through what they undertook opened the pathway for later developments in the field. The Middle Ages: 5001450 illuminates what occurred during medieval times that affected future developments in medicine. The back matter of the volume contains a chronology, a glossary, and
1
Medical beliefs in Medieval times
he fall of the Western Roman Empire altered the pace of progress for the people of the medieval era. Parts of Europe were so disrupted that chaos overshadowed any type of scientific or medical knowledge. In other areas, the culture held together well enough that some of the medical practices from Greek and Roman times survived to be passed on to later generations. Inheriting these classical beliefs was a mixed blessing. The theories of anatomy, circulation, and how diseases passed among people were a good start at medical understanding, and the ideas would have been good stepping stones on the way to more advanced scholarship. Unfortunately, most practitioners viewed the information as indisputable truths, so the classic beliefs smothered the possibility of additional learning. Particularly damaging was the strict adherence to the belief in the four humors, and the resulting practice of bloodletting as a way to bring the humors in better balance. Religious healing predominated during this time, and advances were made in botany, some of which led to the creation of herbal medications that were helpful. While surgery was held in low regard, it was vital when someone suffered kidney stones 1
During the Middle Ages, healers still believed that the way to restore a persons health was to rebalance their humors.
Phlegm: The qualities of a person who was categorized as being dominated by phlegm were cold, wet, and slow to anger but also sluggish and dull. Generally speaking, phlegmatic people were considered detached and cool, and in medieval times it was the merchant who best fit this category. Yellow bile: The qualities related to yellow bile were hot and dry. An excess of yellow bile (choler) was thought to make a person irritable. Thin people were categorized
Bleeding and cupping. These processes were performed curatively and also used preventively. Medieval practitioners seemed to recommend bloodletting be done every three months or so. Cupping involved using a hot cup to draw blood and other fluids out of the body or away from a certain body part. Cautery. Cautery burns the body and was used to clean and seal a cut. Purgatives. Laxatives and emetics were used to clean out the organs or to bring about balance of the humors. Vermifuges. Intestinal worms were a big problem during this time, and treatment involved the use of herbal remedies with nerve-paralyzing properties so that the worms would detach. This treatment would be used in combination with
laxatives so that the body could be rid of the parasites. Baths, steam baths, and fumigations. Some believed that bathing and water were bad for ones health because it opened the pores, which could cause illness, but many others believed that bathing was healing. Simples and compound remedies. Simples were one-ingredient medicines, and these were used as frequently as compound remedies. Medicines themselves were mixed in to be used in many forms that could be consumed as syrups, electuaries, waters, wines, or used as topical ointments or plasters. Surgery. Because certain conditions required a surgical solution, surgeries were performed. The outcome was frequently poor, so physicians left this type of work to others, generally barber-surgeons. Dietary changes. These were considered curative as part of balancing the humors. Charms and relics. These were used at times when an illness was thought to have been caused by some type of bad spirit.
Trial and error were at the heart of all the methods used. If a patient improved, then it was an excellent remedy and would be tried on others; if the patient did not get better, then the healer had to evaluate whether it was the cure that failed, or whether the patient was at fault in some way.
(Opposite) People needed to be self-sustaining, so they learned to grow edible plants as well as plants that could be turned into medicines. Garden space was also allotted for flowers that looked beautiful and smelled good.
The humoral balance of a person was thought to be influenced by astrology, so the zodiac man, an illustration that depicted which astrological sign dominated what organ, was one of the reference tools used by physicians and healers.
ingrained, and the zodiac mana graphic depiction of which astrological signs dominated what organswas an important part of treatment. Though alchemy is now thought of as the search for a way to turn a base metal into gold, medieval scientists became fascinated by it following the Crusades (1095ca. 1300) when the first texts on this subject were translated from Arabic into Latin. Alchemy was based on Aristotles theory of earth, air, fire, and water. While the focus was often on gold, those who practiced it could be working on changing any number of substances into something else. Practitioners made certain they were surrounded by symbolic colors, and they recited magical incantations while sometimes trying to work out scientific principles. Over time, any type of science seemed like a threat to the churchs authority over life, and eventually Aristotles books were banned. Because Western Europe was in disarray in the early Middle Ages, it was left to the Eastern region, Islam, to preserve and
Conclusion
While it is sometimes written that medical progress came to a standstill during medieval times, this is not totally accurate. The medical practitioners of the Middle Ages did not make great strides in the science of better health and healing, but people still got hurt and became ill, and healers stepped in to provide comfort and attempt cures. The heavy influence of religion combined with the misguided theories of humoral balance and the fact that the societal norm of the time was not to question meant that scientific progress moved slowly. But if progress in any field comes through the proverbial one step forward and two steps back, then the medieval practitioners may have paved the way for those who followed them by demonstrating what did not work. Certainly by the end of the Middle Ages, the world was prepared for major scientific leaps in many fields.
2
Medieval healers and hospitals
uring the Middle Ages, basic health care and any curative treatments were primarily managed at home by family members, but when needed, outside help was sought. Early on, there was neither a controlling medical elite nor any particular standard for those who practiced healing. Most healers combined their work with another profession, and few were actually trained in any form of medicine. University training for physicians began to be available to a very few starting in the 12th century. When hospitals began to appear, they were originally rest places for travelers; only later were they dedicated to a place for the ailing. If a nonfamily member was called in to treat a patient during this time, a sick person in western Europe might have been treated by one of three types of healers: a folk healer, a clerical leader, or a surgeon. A folk healer (also known as an empiric, a term used by university-trained physicians to refer to nonuniversity trained practitioners) made up the largest category. These healers learned techniques from each other and through trial and error. Clerical leaders were the second group of nonfamily members consulted for medical advice; for them religion came first, and prayers for healing often trumped any actual hands-on medical care. Surgeons were the final type of medical practitioner. In many communities, surgical duties were assumed by the barber because of 18
1
his basic knowledge of how to stop bleeding if a person was cut during a shave. In communities where there was enough need, some barbers quit providing haircuts and shaves and devoted themselves to serving as a towns full-time barber-surgeon. By the 12th century, universities began to offer medical training to a very small group of men. Eventually some level of licensing came into play within the fields of medicine and surgery, and this provided some guarantee of a minimum level of training and education. Even during the latter part of the Middle Ages when physicians began to attend universities, there were actually very few schools, and those that existed tended to graduate only five or six individuals each year. Because there were so few people who emerged with these advanced degrees, few people would have had access to a university-trained physician. This chapter examines the various types of healers, ranging from folk healers to those who were university trained. Apothecaries, surgeons, and barber-surgeons were also important to healing, and eventually hospitals were helpful, first as places to isolate the sick and only later on to provide better health care.
folK heAlerS
In the early part of the medieval period, folk healers were all that existed to help anyone who was sick or injured. The term empiric was used as a pejorative by some during the Middle Ages when referring to folk healers; while the word generally is used to describe methodology based on experience, it was used by medieval physicians to describe those who practiced using skills honed through experience, but without regard to the science or deep insight into the problem. Empirics made up the largest group of health providers in medieval Europe, and both men and women were included. Some of these empirics were generalists; others specialized in one type of care or another. (Midwives, discussed in chapter 5, would have been included in this category.) Their approaches to treatment varied widely, from first-aid measures (simple cleaning and bandaging) to the use of medicinal herbs or prayers and magic.
Saints Cosmas and Damianan icon from the 17th century (Historic
Museum in Sanok, Poland)
Islamic Medical Text c. 1500. Illuminated opening of the fourth book of the Kitab alQanun fi al-tibb (The Canon on Medicine) by Ibn Sina (Avicenna). Undated; probably Iran, beginning of 15th century (National
Library of Medicine)
background made him attractive enough that he was invited to base himself in Italy at the Schola Medica Salernitana (Salerno). Many of the works of Greek and Roman philosophers and physicians, including Galen and Hippocrates, had been preserved by the Islamic countries and translated into Arabic. Constantinus was able to translate much of this work into Latin to make it accessible for the first time to western Europeans, and so westerners began to study the medical methodology recommended by these men. As a result of this influence, Galen, who had written on many subjects, continued to dominate medicine for the next few centuries. Other monks eventually contributed to what Constantinus was working on, and the professors at Salerno began using this canon of writings, known as the Ars medicinae (art of medicine) or Articella (little art of medicine), as the basis for European medical education for several years. Later Gerard of Toledo, Spain, (ca. 1140) translated hundreds of works by Aristotle, Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Razi as well as Abu al-Qasims (Albucasis) writings on surgery. The Qanun of Ibn Sina became the cornerstone textbook of medicine at the University of Montpellier, the largest nonclerical institution in Europe until 1650.
cinnamon, and ginger, and they often imported specialty items that were thought to be curative. These included ivory, gold, pearls, mummy dust, and ambergris (from whales). Sugar was a key ingredient for improving the flavor of medicinal syrups and pills. Some apothecaries created a sideline by selling sugar pills to wealthy clients who liked sweets, creating an early form of candy.
Early Scientists
Albertus Magnus (ca. 120080) was a priest born in Germany, who was educated at Padua and went on to become a fine teacher in Paris. While a certain degree of science had been used during the Roman Empire, Albertus was the first European to use the scientific method. He built his theories on Aristotle and added to these the idea that there could be the possibility of chemical change. The church ultimately canonized him as a patron saint of scientists. Thomas Aquinas (122574) was regarded as a great theologian and philosopher. He became the principal interpreter of Aristotles works, and he taught a methodology that combined Aristotles emphasis on naturalism with scientific rationalism and theology. Aquinas was canonized in 1323 and came to be considered the patron of Catholic schools. Roger Bacon (ca. 122092) was a Franciscan monk who explored the world of science under the protection of Pope Clement IV. When Clement died, Bacon was put in prison and some of his writings were burned. In 1733, 450 years after his death, his major work was finally published; it revealed that even earlier than Leonardo da Vinci (14521519), Bacon predicted steamships, automobiles, submarines, and flying machines. In 1230 he wrote
Medieval Hospitals
Hospitals in medieval times were not really hospitals in the modern sense of the word. While some offered minor medical care, they were primarily created to offer food and shelter to travelers (hospital is derived from the Latin word hospes, which means guest or foreigner). Religious entities were the primary sponsors of these facilities. A Christian organization, the Knights Hospitaller (later known as the Knights of Malta), established many hospitals during the 12th century in areas through which people traveled on the Crusades so that soldiers and pilgrims would have a place to rest and get food. Over time, the Knights of Malta began to expand its offerings, establishing facilities elsewhere in Europe. Almost half of the hospitals in medieval Europe were connected with monasteries, priories, or churches. These facilities generally started out as infirmaries for the care of monks and nuns, but eventually they broadened to offer aid to anyone who needed it, with monks and lay helpers providing a basic level of health care,
Medieval hospital. La Grand Chambre des Povresthe Great Room of the Pooris believed to be the worlds oldest edifice to have been in continuous use as a hospital. Representative of medieval hospitals, it is a part of the Htel-Dieu de Beaune, France, founded in 1443. Combined with modern professional hospital service, it carefully preserves the atmosphere of the 15th century. Sisters of the Congregation of Sainte Marthe, garbed in habits traditional to their ancient order, have cared for the sick, the aged, and the indigent in this hospital for more than 500 years, uninterrupted by wars, or by economic or political changes. (Department of Library Sciences, Christian Medical College
Vellore, History of Medicine Picture Collection)
people but others were much bigger. St. Leonards in York could care for as many as 225 sick or poor individuals by the late 13th century, though this was still small compared to todays standards. The interior design of most hospitals was like a big residential dormitory with a chapel, a kitchen, and laundry facilities attached. If the facility serviced both men and women then there were generally two separate wings to house them. Typically, more than one person was assigned to each bed. This was common practice in households, so patients probably didnt think much about it. In one account, 12 children were expected to share one bed. By the 15th century some facilities were moving toward private beds with curtains for privacy. The wealthy would have been kept at home if they were sick, or grander arrangements would have been made for them if they were traveling, so these facilities were primarily for the poor. With continued leadership from the church during the 13th century, the hospital facilities became bigger and better designed.
Medieval hospitals were set up like large dormitories. Men and women were separated but frequently more than one person was assigned to the same bed.
concluSion
Medieval healers ranged from folk healers who may have been quite good at their work to university-trained physicians whose education was based on Galen and Hippocrates, with few improvements since the origins of these mens theories. Understanding of anatomy was inaccurate, and while medieval practitioners were somewhat successful at divining helpful herbal cures, the medications and the dosages were all developed through trial and error. It would have been a dangerous time to be a patient. Hospitals began as places offering food and rest for travelers. Most were attached to or run by a religious organization, and over time, these facilities began to offer some basic medical care.
3
diagnosis and treatment Methods
edieval medical healers and physicians took diagnosis and treatment of their patients very seriously. An initial diagnosis involved evaluating a persons normal state of health, taking into account his or her symptoms, assessing (nonscientifically) the persons blood and urine, and then considering how any treatment would be affected by the current position of the stars. Other than checking a patients pulse, a physician would rarely touch a patient. Basic fi rst aid was important in helping a patient; dietary changes were sometimes recommended, and bloodletting and cautery (see chapter 4, Surgery in the Middle Ages) were also very popular cures. However, herbal remedies or religious healing were generally the preferred solutions. Herbal remedies were mixed according to the specification of the healer or the physician (sometimes mixed by the healer him- or herself). Sometimes the herbal remedies were to clean the body (through purging or evacuation of the bowels) in order to rid the person of a particular illness. Surgery was high risk, so while a growth might be removed or a bone set, invasive surgery was avoided whenever possible. This chapter will examine the methods physicians and healers used to diagnose an illness and then will explain the way medica35
Diagnostic Methods
The medieval medical practitioner felt that the key to diagnosing a persons ailments was assessing the persons humoral balance to determine the nature of the illness and to prescribe the appropriate cure. This diagnosis rarely involved physical examination of the patient, which was considered unnecessary, and of course, male practitioners were prohibited from examining a female patient. Observing the patient was the first step in making a diagnosis. This permitted the physician to identify the persons normal temperament, so that the physician could then identify whether the person had departed from normal behavior and what would bring the person back in balance. (See the sidebar Identifying and Treating a Patients Illness on page 39.) Part of the humoral imbalance needed to be considered in the context of the persons zodiac sign. Physicians generally carried with them a small handbook that contained helpful charts, including an astrological chart to make a proper diagnosis. The two items that needed to be considered next were the patients urine and blood. Though medieval practitioners had no understanding of the chemistry of these substances or exactly what they were looking for when they collected them, they believed it was important that these two substances be evaluated. A uroscopy, known then as a way to evaluate the health of the liver by checking the urine, was such an integral part of medieval medicine that the clear glass beakers used to hold and then examine the patients urine became a symbol of the medical profession. Medieval textbooks ran full color illustrations of the 20 recognized colors of urine. The urine colors were displayed in graph form and ranged from colors signifying illness (blue, black, and dark red) to those that were viewed as healthier, including several shades of yellow right through to almost clear. Physicians consid-
This is a 15th century painting known as Les trs riches heures du Duc de Berry. Signs of the zodiac are depicted in their correspondence to each part of the body, starting with Pisces, the feet, and working up to the head, Aries. (Muse Cond, Chantilly, 15th century)
Physicians were carefully trained to evaluate the nuances of these elements. After considering the necessary factors, the physician would place these symptoms within the context of the patients astrological sign. The healer then felt prepared to identify the disease and predict its course and outcome. Of course, this was merely a best guess but it was all they had at the time. Physicians prided themselves on their accuracy, particularly in regard to whether or not the patient pulled through. A physicians reputation rose and fell based on the accuracy of the predicted outcome.
The roots of the mandrake plant were highly valued as a painkiller but the plant grew only in the Mediterranean region. The added cost of shipping it out of the southern region made it a very expensive medicine that only wealthy people could afford. Hemp was eventually identified as a cheaper alternative to mandrake. Every manor grew hemp for its fibrous stalks that made good ropes, so it was readily available for use as a painkiller at a much lower cost. The poppy plant (from which opium is made) was also grown as a painkiller; sometimes mothers used poppy juice on their nipples so the baby would sleep after feeding. Cinchona bark (quinine) was another remedy of the period, and this plant is still viewed as effective for malaria.
Little has been written about how they determined food qualities, but as with herbal remedies, the medieval food values were almost certainly a combination of association (what the food reminded them of) and trial and error. For example, fish are cold and wet, so they were identified as bringing out the moist and cool humoral balance. Experience taught medieval people which foods were calming to the stomach and which were not. Over time this information was codified, so charts and graphs were created to provide healers with lists of foods and their various qualities. The methodology behind these beliefs was rudimentary and not very accurate, but it shows a basic understanding of the effect nutrition could have on a persons health. Astrological predictions were very important to any type of treatment of the time, so even when recommending a lifestyle change, a skilled physician also factored in the position of the stars and what effect it might have on what the patient ate.
Spices were also thought to be curative. Cumin, cardamom, ginger, cloves, and many others were part of recipes for medications. Vegetables such as rhubarb and lettuce were commonly added, as were various vegetable oils made from certain plants or their seeds. Monasteries and royal families grew extensive gardens filled with herbs and spices that could be used in cooking as well as for medicines. (See the sidebar Types of Gardens on page 43.)
Nonvegetable Ingredients
Some elements that were used as medicines were more like what might be found in a witches brew. One medieval physician recommended applying pig dung to a patients nose to stop a
Types of Gardens
Gardens were vital to rich and poor during the Middle Ages. Importing anything from afar was difficult and costly, so food as well as herbs and spices used in medicines primarily had to be home grown. The following types of gardens created were based on their primary purpose: Peasant gardens. These gardens mainly featured vegetables with as many medicinal herbs as peasants could grow successfully. They were generally surrounded by wattle (woven) fences in an effort to keep pigs out of the garden. Abbey gardens. Monasteries had multiple gardens, including vegetable gardens and herbers for cultivating foods and herbs to eat, an infirmarers garden of medicinal herbs, and orchards created for growing fruit but also laid out in such a way that monks came to them to both pray and pace (monks frequently pondered difficult questions while pacing). Monasteries realized the benefits of wonderful smells, and the plans for most abbey gardens show that fruit trees were planted near the infirmary so that people could smell the wonderful odors. Abbeys also sometimes set aside land for townspeople to grow what they needed. Gardens for royalty and noblemen. Like monasteries, the homes and castles of the wealthy were multipurpose and extensive. While growing food and medicines was vital to the well-being of those who lived on the estate, beauty and pleasure were also considered in the design. From
(continues)
(continued)
bordered walkways and fountains to nosegay gardens that gave off a beautiful fragrance, the ideal medieval garden was both practical and beautiful. (Also see chapter 1, Medical Beliefs in Medieval Times.) Infirmary/hospital gardens. These gardens were used to grow herbs, fruits, and other plants for the relief and refreshment of those who came to the hospital. Much of what was grown was used in cooking and for relief through the preparation of medicinal baths and for other health-giving purposes. In smaller hospitals, the sisters took care of the gardening in addition to tending to the patients and visitors. In some communities, the gardens provided enough produce that surplus apples, pears, onions, and leeks could be sold on the open market as a cash crop. Most hospitals also created paradyse gardens to offer solace to the troubled or grieving. While cultivation of these hospital gardens was mainly performed by women, in wealthy areas, a gardener did the work but took orders from the matron as well as the physician and the surgeon. In English almshouses, the more mobile and capable residents were expected to help with tending and weeding the gardens. Gardens helped make the medieval people self-sufficient in growing their own food and developing knowledge of medicinal plants. Later on, the science of botany became very important to the development of medications.
Religious Healing
Medical knowledge of the day was inadequate for solving many health problems, so healing through prayer and divination seemed like a logical option. Since physicians and healers could be expensive and were not available in some communities, faith healing offered advantages. Anyone could pray for help at any time, and every community had religious leaders to whom they could turn for this type of healing. While the Middle Ages are sometimes referred to as the age of faith, there is no evidence that prayer was used exclusively in the search of a cure unless a family was so poor that they couldnt afford other care, or unless a patient was so ill that no medical professionalwho always had to keep in mind his reputation for carewould take the case. The wording of prayers from that time shows that the requests made were indirect. A prayer was sent to a specific saint who was then asked to contact God on behalf of the person who was ill. The Virgin Mary was a popular recipient of these prayers, but the appeals were often made to others as well. St. Apollonia was the patron saint for toothaches. Eye problems were addressed through St. Lucy. Patron saints were often martyrs, and the connection
Relics
In faith healing, relics were often important to the process, and if a possession that was thought to have belonged to a saint seemed to cure effectively, then myths about the objects grew. This success brought great attention to the house of worship that claimed ownership of the relic, and that church soon became the site of mass pilgrimages, which brought an increase of attention and income. Pilgrimages brought generous donations, and so churches could create shrines decorated with gems and gold, which heightened the reputation of the saint honored. A good example of this was the Thomas Becket shrine that was located in Canterbury Cathedral. (Geoffrey Chaucers classic The Canterbury Tales was about a pilgrimage there.) The shrine was destroyed during the time of Henry VIII (14911547). Some made pilgrimages to shrines as a sign of devotion to God; others did so to give thanks for a positive development in their lives; still others came seeking a cure. A more arduous trip was thought to give the pilgrim added leverage when making his or her plea. Many added hardship to their journey by walking instead of riding horseback, or making as big a financial gift to the shrine as they could afford, with the hope of being rewarded.
(Opposite) Legendary transplantation of a leg by saints Cosmas and Damian, assisted by angels. Cosmas and Damian are regarded as the patrons of physicians and surgeons and are sometimes represented with medical emblems. They are invoked in the Canon of the Mass and in the Litany of the Saints. (Andreas Praefcke)
Magic
Empirics relied heavily on magic charms and incantations or spells to try to drive away illnesses. University-trained physicians occasionally used magic too, particularly that which was based in astrology. During medieval times, people believed that elves and goblins filled the air with invisible powers of evil, so healers would often create amulets that were filled with herbs, stones, and other materials as they were believed to generate some supernatural power for healing or for warding off illness. It was believed that this use of amulets could preserve ones eyesight, cure lunacy, prevent one from fatigue while traveling, or even protect ones cattle. The herbs could be worn or hung from a door (usually with red wool), and during pre-Christian times in Rome, a practice developed of wearing brooches and pins that were inscribed with protective words. Because this practice began before Christianity, the words often evoked divine assistance from a god or goddess. This practice survived even after Christianity was prevalent but saints names were then substituted for the gods that had been used previously. Incantations usually needed to be used in combination with herbal medicines or a charm. And sometimes it was very important that certain incantations were recited while collecting ingredients for a medication. Additional incantations were later said as the medicine was administered. Many of the incantations that survive in written form appear to be gibberish. Because few people were literate, they were passed down orally, and as a result, it is hard to know how these magic spells started out. An incantation may have originally been in Latin but through repeated mispro-
Dental Hygiene
Even at this time, perfect white teeth and sweet breath were the ideal, but medieval people did not know much about dental hygiene or how to guard against tooth decay. Toothbrushes did not exist until the 19th century, and the concept of flossing to rid the mouth of bits of food did not come about until the 20th century. Health manuals talk of picking food out of teeth (but it was not to be done in public). Chewing on mallows, a reedy plant that grows in marshy areas, and rinsing ones mouth with wine or vinegar was also recommended. These methods would not cure gum or dental disease, and deficiencies in diet caused additional difficulties. In the 10th century an Arab physician revived a practice of tooth scraping (which resulted in the removal of tartar) that was tried as early as the 7th century in Greece. This was used occasionally throughout Europe by the 12th century, but it would be a long time before it became a common practice. Despite the difficulties in maintaining dental hygiene, most people tended to keep enough of their teeth, enabling them to eat solid foods for most of their lives.
Conclusion
Diagnosis and treatment during the Middle Ages was well intended but unscientific. The physician usually did not actually physically touch a patient, except perhaps to check pulse rate, and symptoms,
4
Surgery in the Middle Ages
he Middle Ages varied only a little from other times when it came to illness and injury. People were hurt in battles, they were bitten by animals, they fell and broke bones, or they dislocated joints (usually the shoulder). Some suffered from hernias or kidney stones. These situations frequently caused great pain and surgical intervention was sometimes the only solution. As a result, those with surgical expertise found themselves in great demand. Despite this great need, the practice of surgery was viewed poorly by physicians of the time. Surgery was considered manual work, more comparable to the tasks of a tradesman than to that of a physician. Unlike surgeons today who must train and be licensed as medical doctors, surgeons of medieval times were not educated as physicians. It was believed that true doctors healed by observation and by prescribing remedies rather than through any type of physical intervention. This meant that surgeons came to the profession from very different backgrounds that did not include any form of medical study; quite often the town barber also served as the town surgeon. As many communities could not support a barber-surgeon, a custom was developed so that some barber-surgeons traveled to perform needed surgeries. An additional benefit of itinerant surgeons (a benefit to the surgeons, that is) was that they often 53
Mouth pain was common among all people, and one Arabian surgeon, Abu al-Qasim (Abulcasis; 9361013), realized that the tartar that built up on teeth was not helpful to good tooth health. These are some of the dental scrapers he created to clean teeth.
Hacksaws were the basic instrument for limb removal. Mallets and chisels were used for trephining (skull surgery). Iron rods were employed for cautery (a process that destroys tissue through burning or scarring). Various sizes of knives and scalpels were used for different types of cutting. Forceps, tweezers, and tongs were used for the removal of foreign matter, holding open incisions, and repositioning tissue as necessary. Needles provided surgeons with the ability to close wounds through suturing. Small tubes, cannulae, were used for draining blood and other fluids from around internal wounds. One 13thcentury Italian physician thought to insert a cannula into an esophagus of a patient to serve as a feeding tube.
These tools were primitive but reasonably effective in the hands of someone skilled. Unfortunately, the medical community knew very little about the importance of a sterile environment for operating,
Bloodletting
The actual bloodletting process involved making a small incision, often performed by a surgeon or barber-surgeon, to drain out some of the persons blood. The location of the bloodletting was determined by the nature of the illness as well as guidance obtained by the physician through interpretation of an astronomical calendar. Certain signs of the zodiac governed specific parts of the body, and it was believed that the health of the person would be affected by
Cupping
Cupping was another method used for draining blood in some illnesses. Surgeons made a number of small, shallow slashes in the patients flesh at a location designated as significant to a particular illness. A metal cup was heated over an open flame, and then the hot cup was pressed against the When a glass cup was heated and scarified surface of the skin. then pressed against the skin, it drew The heat and the pressure cre- blood to that area. This was thought ated a slight vacuum and served to be helpful to healing. to draw blood out of the cuts. Though this process involved both cutting and a very hot cup, it was considered less hazardous and less painful than bloodletting. As a result, it was often the first treatment of choice for the elderly as well as women and children.
Cautery
Cautery is a process using either a chemical agent or a heated instrument to burn out diseased or severely damaged tissue along with any infection. Once the diseased tissue is removed, the heat helps seal the wound. During medieval times, cautery was used preventively, as well as to balance the humors. (The process was used by the Romans as early as the second century c.e., and the Arabs used it frequently as well.) By applying a red-hot tool at specific points for certain symptoms (much the way acupuncture and acupuncture points are used), it was believed the physician could adjust the humors and cure ailments ranging from headaches and joint pain
Wound man, an illustration that is attributed to surgeon Hans von Gersdorff from his Feldtbch der Wundartzney (Fieldbook of wound surgery; Strasbourg, 1528) (National Library of Medicine)
While cautery sounds crude, a form of it is actually used in modern microsurgery where surgeons use lasers to burn and seal blood vessels shut. Today patients have the benefit of anesthesia, a luxury that was not available to medieval patients. The detail provided in this sidebar gives a graphic understanding of how stones were removed from the bladder during the Middle Ages. Though some patients might have been given wine beforehand, the procedure would have taken place without any other form of anesthesia.
Battlefield Wounds
Then as now, battlefield injuries were often fatal, and when not fatal, they were not easy to treat. Blood loss was always a problem, and injuries ranged from broken bones and head injuries to
Prominent Surgeons
During the 13th century, surgery became part of the curriculum at some universities, so some physicians began training to practice surgery, though it was still considered less prestigious than other types of healing. Lanfranc of Milan (12501306), a surgeon who was also known as Guido Lanfranchi or Lanfranco, was a native of Milan who became a popular professor of surgery at the Collge de St. Cme in France. The dean of the faculty requested that Lanfranc write about what he knew, and Lanfranc put on paper his knowledge of anatomy, embryology, ulcers, fistulae, fractures, and dislocated joints, as well as some nonsurgical subjects such as herbal medicines; the result became a major work on medicine. Though it was written in 1296 and was one of the few books that outlined the medical thinking of the day, it was not published until 1490. It became quite popular at that time and it was then translated into multiple languages and reprinted several times. Shortly after Lanfranc, Henri de Mondeville (12691320), contributed to surgical knowledge. De Mondeville served as a military surgeon to the French royal family and he pushed for changes in wound care. Since the time of Hippocrates, healers had believed that wounds needed to create pus to draw poison from the body. De Mondeville recommended closing the wound before pus had time to form, and he is thought to have been first to prove that pus was not necessary in order for a wound to heal properly.
Arderne was also admired for his approach to fee setting. While he was happy to charge the rich for his services, he believed that poor men should be seen free of charge. By 1370 he was a member of the Guild of Surgeons, and by the end of his long life, he achieved the title of master surgeon.
Conclusion
There was a great need for surgical skill throughout the Middle Ages, but because of the high risk involved in surgery, physicians, whose reputations were created or destroyed by patient outcomes, refused to undertake most surgical procedures. This left the profession in the hands of barber-surgeons and other healers who learned the techniques through apprenticeships. While minor
5
Women Practitioners and What Was Known about Womens health
edieval healers were people with the time, availability, and interest in making people better, and there were few who were better suited for that role than the women of a community. The people of the time knew enough about disease to know that when someone was ill, this increased the risk that the illness might spread to others. In a feudal society everyone needed to participate, so when oneor manyfell sick this hurt the communitys ability to survive. This provided women with the motivation to tend to the sick, and they gained invaluable on-the-job experience about the best ways to maintain good health. Women were also vital to the healing process because men were prohibited from examining women. If a woman suffered from something serious, such as heavy bleeding or another type of dire medical situation, a physician might then be consulted. However, the female healer served as the intermediary since direct examination of a female by a male was not allowed. Though women were primarily involved with family and female-related health issues, a few ventured into other fields. In 71
Professional guilds that regulated who could practice medicine and how they should be trained as well as the licensing of medical practitioners developed as a way to control who practiced medicine in each community, and women must have been very necessary to many communities as a good number were given licenses to care for patients. A guild in Florence permitted a few women to join, and in 1276 Sister Ann of York (England) qualified to practice medicine. Most who did so were related to a licensed physician or guild member, and they took over a practice left by a brother, father, or spouse. If a woman had a family connection to someone willing to train her, then she might have become a surgeon, a job for which women were thought to be well suited because it was believed that women had fine motor skills. In about 1250, a woman identified as Katherine became a surgeon in London; she was the daughter of one surgeon and the sister of another. Agnes Woodcock, a British citizen, may have been among the last of women during medieval times who received any type of training in surgery. Agnes apprenticed under surgeon Nicholas Bradmore, who thought enough of
Midwives
Even after the 14th century when university training became important within the medical profession and women started being edged out, women were still valued for their work as midwives. Like most medical practices of the time, midwifery alternated from the practical (helping the woman give birth) to the superstitious. Among the superstitions was the belief that the mother would have an easier labor if the midwife opened the doors and drawers and cabinets of the household, took out the stoppers of every bottle, jar, and jug, and removed all the hairpins from the future mothers hair. While few texts on gynecology were to be found during the Middle Ages, one that survived from Roman times noted the qualities
Her Works
Hildegard wrote two major books of medical writings after she received what she felt were her divine revelations about the causes and cures of many diseases. Causae et curae (Holistic Healing) and Physica of liber subtilitatum diversarum naturatum creatarum (The Book of Simple Medicine). She based the science in her books on the Greek cosmology of the four elementsfire, air, water, and earth balanced by heat, dryness, moisture, and cold. The Book of Simple Medicine was encyclopedic in its scope, and while much of it was possibly helpful, it also included magic formulas. As her work expanded, Hildegard addressed many aspects of healing; she wrote of using plants, trees, and stones medicinally.
concluSion
During the Middle Ages women were important participants in the field of medicine. They were people to whom a community could turn for help, and their on-the-job experience coupled with their good instincts meant that many of these women excelled as healers. Though the trend toward university training for physicians lowered the status of women who were healers, in actual practice, women were still very much needed as the only resource other women could consult and for their ability and availability.
6
Public health in the Middle Ages
he Middle Ages in Europe are generally portrayed as a period when fi lth of all types abounded. The streets were reputed to be fi lled with garbage and waste materials that households freely dumped out their doors or windows. Sewers existed but they were little more than open channels through which the sewage could flow, so towns were very likely smelly. The practice of bathing varied by region; some communities had well-used public baths, but elsewhere bathing was discouraged since some believed that warm water opened the pores and this led to ill health. Though contemporary documents on this subject are not plentiful because of the low literacy rate, analysis of facts from the period led historians such as Paul B. Newman, an expert on medieval life, to the conclusion that the truth lies somewhere between the myth of dirty streets and the ideal of the level of cleanliness achieved by the Roman Empire. The population figures during the Middle Ages reveal steady growth until the 14th century when there was a severe drop in numbers because of the ferocity of the bubonic plague. The fact that towns and cities supported strong growth is evidence that the medieval towns had developed some methods for effective sanitation techniques or disease would have 85
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increased the water flow, the absence of pumps would have meant that the flow of water would have lacked pressure. The systems were usually designed so that water could be slowed or held temporarily in settling houses along the way. This allowed the sediment to settle out before the water continued through the pipes and into a cistern. The early methods of water purification were very primitive. Metal grillwork was inserted at places where the pipes were joined, and this prevented logs, weeds, fish, and animal carcasses from flowing along with the water.
of repair work. As more time passed and these facilities fell into greater disrepair, the citizens of the Middle Ages did not always work to preserve them. In villages that were expanding, workers sometimes took the more easily available stones from the aqueducts and used them as building materials. As a result, this Roman legacy disappeared in many locations. While the medieval people continued to create their own sanitation facilities and waterworks, they never mastered the art of building on the grand scale that the Romans did.
Clean Water
At the beginning of the Middle Ages, much of the population lived in rural areas with no public infrastructure. As a result, the two areas where large groups of people lived togethermonasteries and castlesproved to be the locations where progress was made on water and waste management. In monasteries, the water traveled through a piping system and was made available for use in the monasterys kitchen, the brew-
Sanitation Systems
As with water delivery, castles and monasteries were the first locations where relatively high population numbers drove a need to develop methods for disposing of waste. While a castles elevated location complicated water delivery, it simplified waste removal. When possible, the planner-architects of the day preferred to place buildings where there was easy access for piping to reach to a long, straight drop, preferably over a river or moat where the water would take away the waste. One monastery was built on a coastline and the waste was flushed into an area where rising tides could carry the waste out to sea twice a day. The pipes or troughs carrying waste and kitchen garbage angled down and joined the main drainage shaft, with everything exiting from one opening
Necessary Rooms
Urinals in monasteries generally consisted of a trough in the floor along one wall, though a few had more elaborate systems with a basin around a central fountain to take away the waste. The latrines in monasteries consisted of long wooden planks, placed on wooden or stone supports, with appropriately sized holes placed at regular intervals. They were referred to as necessarium (Latin for necessary room or place). Archaeological evidence reveals that though they lacked toilet paper some monasteries used thin rags, possibly torn from old robes.
Personal Baths
By the 11th and 12th centuries space was provided for baths in the homes of lay nobility, but the process of bathing wasnt easy. Water for the tub generally had to be carried inside and heated over cauldrons, and unless the tub had a drainpipe of some sort, then the water needed to be carried away afterward. As a result, baths tended to be taken less frequently (generally weekly), and bathing during this time was communal so that the water needed and the work required could be put to the best use. Servants would have usually bathed outside to reduce the need for dragging in more water, and winter bathing was likely kept to a minimum because of draftiness. Because full body baths were an ordeal, spot and sponge bathing of the face, hands, and feet was encouraged. Smaller basins could be used, allowing more economical use of water. While some foot bathing was ritualistic, there is also reference to how soothing it was to bathe ones feet in water after a long day walking along muddy streets or working in fields. In Ireland, offering a bath was part of hospitality. If one couldnt offer a whole bath it was proper to at least offer guests the chance to wash their hands or feet. In hospitals and sickrooms nurses gave patients sponge baths. Hildegard of Bingen wrote about the process of face washing in her book, Physica: But one whose face has hard and rough skin, made hard from the wind, should cook barley in water and, having strained that water through a cloth, should bathe his face gently with the moderately warm water. The skin will become soft and smooth, and will have a beautiful color. If a persons head has an ailment, it should be washed frequently in this water, and it will be healed. In Florence healers recommended that hands be washed in vinegar but they discouraged bathing because it opened pores to disease. (This followed the Greek theory of Democritos about the dangers of open pores.) At monasteries, those in the infirmary were usually offered warm baths, but otherwise, attitudes toward bathing varied. Some monastic orders made bathing in hot air and steam part of a regular bathing regimen while others forbid bathing except at Christmas
During the Middle Ages, pollutants flowed into riversthe source of clean waterfrom many avenues that were not well understood at the time.
By the 12th century the port of Marseilles employed workers to clean the streets adjoining the harbor to keep garbage from going into the water, and the crews of all boats entering the harbor had to swear to keep the harbor clean. Garbage could not be dumped into the harbor and the hull of the ship was not to be scraped while at port. Penalties were exacted if these laws were ignored. Lice and nit removal was also important, but that, too, bore some regulation. In the 13th century in Italy there was a civic regulation that prohibited citizens from delousing each other in public arcades. Waste and by-products of all trades were to be disposed of properly. Zoning laws in medieval cities dictated that businesses that produced noxious smells or waste products were to be located in districts away from homes. The preferred location for these enterprises was outside the city walls and downstream from where the city water was drawn. Butchers often slaughtered the animals outside their shops, and fishmongers had to gut and scale the fish delivered to their stores. Consequently animal viscera were among the waste products generated by stores in the town. Many of the businesses worked with treatment products that caused noxious
concluSion
Scientific advances to improve living habits were scant during the Middle Ages, but they werent nonexistent. Medieval monasteries, castles, and towns mastered the art of water delivery and sanitation removal, and public laws were put in place to try to safeguard the communities and their water supplies. While personal bathing was very difficult and the popularity of public baths waxed and waned, there was a basic understanding that cleanliness was helpful to maintaining good health, and monasteries and hospitalswhile not understanding bacteria and germsstill knew that occasional hand washing was beneficial.
7
terrifying illnesses of Medieval times
ntil the late Middle Ages, no experience with disease had been quite so terrible as the spread of what is thought to have been the bubonic plague. This plague was a virulent illness that spread easily and killed quickly. As trade routes expanded, ships traveled from China throughout the Middle East and Europe, so disease could spread through a much wider swath of the world than ever before. The medical profession had absolutely no idea what caused this illness, and therefore had poor methods for controlling or attempting to cure it. The first outbreak occurred in the Byzantine Empire in 541542, and it was known as the Plague of Justinian (after the Byzantine ruler of the time who also contracted it). Minor recurrences of the plague occurred until the eighth century when the illness disappeared for a time. The plague, next referred to as the Black Death, recurred in 134751, and during a three-year period approximately 20 million Europeansone-quarter of the populationdied from it. Most epidemiologists believe that Yersinia pestis caused the Black Death. (More recently, a few experts have suggested that the plague was caused by an unknown microbe that no longer exists. A few others felt it was an Ebolalike illness or possibly a disease 101
plague then started an unprecedented rampage throughout Europe. By the time the disease had petered out three years later, anywhere from 25 to 50 percent of the population had died from it.
Fleas became infected by rodents carrying the plague, and the fleas transmitted the disease to humans.
Preventive Measures
If the plague came to a community, it was a dire situation, and superstitions thrived as people grasped at any suggestion offered in order to stay well. During the 14th century people believed that using leeches, bathing in human urine, wearing excrement, placing dead animals in homes, and drinking molten gold and powdered emeralds could safeguard them from illness. Another preventive measure involved killing local dogs and cats, thinking that they somehow were causing the illness to spread. The role of rats was not known at this time.
(continued)
she should then be released. The poor married later since they worked as servants early on, and they had fewer children because they started married life late. This caused a decline in population. Because of these changes, the landowners had difficulty making the land profitable, so they turned to a new arrangement that involved leasing out the land and letting each tenant worry about how to make it profitable. The economic shift began to lead to a political shift as well. When the poorer classes rose, the ruling classes began to provide for more popular participation. Eventually, the formerly landless gentry began to take on positions of municipal leadership, and they were more likely to have access to healers or barber-surgeons. This introduced a new level of popular participation in local and national government. This system paved the way for the broader level of representation in governments like Britain (and eventually the United States) today.
In 1350 the Italian writer Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca, 1304 1374), noted: ... [it] looks to me as if the end of the world is at hand.
Smallpox
Smallpox dates to at least 10,000 b.c.e., and, like the bubonic plague, it also spread in epidemic-style waves, wiping out big populations or leaving survivors incapacitated, often from blindness. The symptoms of smallpox appear suddenly and include a high fever, chills, headaches, back pain, nausea, and vomiting. After two to four days of fever, very noticeable red pustules erupted on the face and body; some could appear within the eyes, affecting vision. The first person to write a medical description of smallpox was Razi (see chapter 8) in about 910 c.e. A well-respected doctor in the Eastern Empire, he noted that the disease seemed to be transmitted from person to person and that those who survived acquired immunity. This led to experimentation with early forms of vaccinations. People seemed to realize that if a person could be given a mild case of an illness, it would prevent them from becoming deathly ill with it later on. People in Asia learned to infect people with small amounts of smallpox to lessen the likelihood of illness. In China, powdered scabs of smallpox blisters were blown through a tube into the nostrils of healthy people. Later on, the Chinese created a pill from fleas removed from cows (cowpox was thought to be related to smallpox) to prevent smallpox. In India, the scabs or pus from a person with smallpox was scratched into the skin of a healthy person. These techniques were taught to other cultures by the caravan travelers, who passed on the knowledge they gained as they traveled. The system was used in the Eastern Empire and eventually introduced in Europe. The actual invention of the vaccination process is attributed to Edward Jenner in 1798 making it likely there was not continuous use of this process after the Middle Ages.
Leprosy
Leprosy also predated the Middle Ages and is described as early as 2400 b.c.e. by the Egyptians. It appears again in the Ebers Papyrus (1600 b.c.e.). In India it is recorded in 600 b.c.e.; it is noted as involving loss of sensation, loss of fingers, deformity, ulceration of the skin, and the sinking in of the nose. The disease seemed to
concluSion
Since the medieval people had no understanding of what caused illnesses, and very little understanding of how diseases were passed from one person to another, they were helpless in the face of highly contagious illnesses such as the bubonic plague and smallpox. While some communities began to understand the benefits of not being near those who were sick, they still lacked knowledge as to how to make someone well. If a person did improve, the return to health came about because of good luck that was then explained as the answer to a prayer. Leprosy was so disfiguring and painful that people feared it and assumed that it was highly contagious. Because people could live for years with the illness, communities began to establish customs that provided for the isolation of anyone suffering from leprosy. These options ranged from leper houses (hospitals devoted to lepers) to community-wide practices that involved socially ostracizing anyone with the disease.
8
the golden Age of islamic Medicine
uring the Middle Ages, the two halves of the Roman Empire developed very differently. The western section moved forward in fits and starts as a feudal government system evolved, and honored a strong allegiance to the ruling elite of the Catholic Church. In contrast, the Eastern Empire grew and prospered in what has become known as the Golden Age of Islam. While this area still faced its challenges and unrest, in general, a culture of scholarship and learning was permitted to grow. The Byzantine Empire, as it is now known, was strongly influenced by the Islamic religion founded by the prophet Muhammad (570632) in the early seventh century. Muhammad was an orphan raised by relatives who intended him to be a merchant. At the age of 40, he received a series of visions in which he believed the Quran (Koran) was revealed to him. He determined that these visions meant that he was destined to be a prophet, and in 613 he began to preach publicly about Allahs power and goodness. In less than 25 years, almost all of Arabia accepted Islamic beliefs and became Muslims. Over the next 100 years, Islamic beliefs spread to Persia, Egypt, North Africa, and Spain. During this early period,
117
(Opposite) Though Ibn Sina traveled a great deal, the territory he covered was only a small portion of the Islamic Empire of that time.
Ibn Sinas Canon of Medicine was a very important work written for healers of the day.
to be taken, the color of the blood and the patients strength was to be considered. Generally bleeding was carried out in several small installments but if a person had hot blood and a fever, then it was recommended that he be bled until he fainted. Abu al-Qasim wrote that the physician should keep his finger on the pulse during the process to monitor when the patient fainted so the process could be halted before the patient actually died. His book also contained a major section on leeches; leeches were considered particularly good for bleeding from deep tissue areas that were difficult to reach with a cupping bleeding procedure. However, the selection of the appropriate leeches was an art. The wrong type of leech could cause inflammation and even paralysis, so Abu al-Qasims book described the way to select the best leech for the task. In his book Abu al-Qasim included illustrations of 200 surgical instruments, many of which may have been created by him. Some of what he accomplished is being rediscovered now by scholars who have returned to re-examine the original documents. When copyists of the time transcribed Abu al-Qasims information into Latin, they sometimes made mistakes, and when they copied the illustrations, they often did not understand the purpose of the surgical instrument. They did not know what was important, and sometimes added decorations or detail, that, of course, changed the interpretation of the surgical tool.
Dioscorides in the first century, scholars translated Dioscorides advice into Arabic and later added to it, and eventually this work was translated into Latin so that even more people could benefit from what had been learned. In creating new medicines, the Islamic pharmacists used ingredients from as far away as China, southeast Asia, the Himalayas, southern India, and Africa, and they introduced new medicines of their own including benzoin, camphor, myrrh, musk laudanum (an alcohol solution of opium), naphtha, senna, and alcohol itself. The Arabs also created a new form of jar for holding medicines. It was known as an albarello and was used for storing herbs, roots, seeds, spices, and other medicinal substances. The jar had slightly concave sides, which made it easy to remove from the shelves. This was helpful in a time when medicines were created to specifica-
Conclusion
By the end of the 15th century, the Islamic world had become very fragmented, which led to a drop in medical and scientific progress. The hospitals that had grown up during the earlier era became dependent upon charitable endowments for their maintenance
chronology
8 C.E. ca. 00500 ca. 500 515 5703 eighth century 805 80875 Eastern Empire splits from the Roman Empire Collapse of the Roman Empire in western Europe Pope Gregory stresses that prayer is more important than medicine The Plague of Justinian spreads through the Byzantine Empire Life span of Muhammad, who founded the Islamic religion Baghdad becomes the capital of the Islamic Empire Founding of the first hospital in Baghdad Life span of Hunayn ibn Ishaq, who translates many of Galens medical and philosophical writings into Arabic Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi writes the first comprehensive illustrated books on surgery Al-Razi is known as the greatest physician of the Islamic world. He serves as director of the first great hospital in Baghdad; he writes more than 200 medical and philosophical treatises, including Comprehensive Book of Medicine, known as the Continens. Ibn Sina, referred to as Prince of Physicians writes 270 works including the major treatise the Canon of Medicine, which is used as the basis for medical courses from 1250 to 1600 Constantinus Africanus translates works of Greek and Roman philosophers and physicians into Latin The Crusades
801037
10101087
ca. 1051300
13
Chronology
1th century Women are permitted to teach and practice medicine at Salerno
137
Many hospitals (offering food and shelter) are established for people traveling on the Crusades Some monasteries and castles create methods for flushing without the tides by constructing large elevated cisterns. When the water was released there was enough pressure to carry away waste. 113 1130 113 ca. 110 Founding of St. Bartholomew and St. Thomas hospitals in London The Council of Clermont brings an end to the practice of medicine by monks Pantokrator Hospital in Constantinople is founded by Byzantine Emperor John II Gerald of Toledo, Spain, translates hundreds of works of Aristotle, Avicenna, al-Razi, and Albacasiss writings on surgery University at Paris is founded University at Bologna is founded Abbess Hildegard of Bingen (woman practitioner) wrote Liber simplicis medicine (Simple book of medicine) University at Oxford founded University at Montpellier is founded Cesspit regulations become part of the zoning code in London Five distinctions of the pulse: 1) motion of the arteries; 2) contraction of the artery; 3) diastolic and systolic duration and pressure; 4) strengthening or weakening of pulsation; 5) regularity or irregularity of the beat Italian physician inserts a cannula into the esophagus of a patient to serve as a feeding tube
1211
12691320 12981368
14th century
Chronology 139
ca. 1300 13071392 Midwives are required to be licensed before practicing Quarantines are established to combat reoccurrences of bubonic plague False Gerber discovers vitriol (sulphuric acid) and describes how to make strong nitric acid John of Arderne specializes in repair of fistula. Devises a method of cutting the lump out and making repairs Dissection becomes a compulsory part of the medical curriculum for the first time at the University of Bologna First pharmacy is created in Dubrovnik, Croatia In Paris, five women are put on trial for practicing medicine without a license. They are found guilty and excommunicated from the church. Bubonic plague outbreak in China First outbreak of bubonic plague (Black Death) in Europe Margery Kempe writes The Book of Margery Kempe, depicting the relationship between practical medicine and spiritual care English physician Gilbert Kymer and some colleagues submit a petition to the British Parliament to ban women from working as doctors Fall of Constantinople Two Dominican friars, Jacob Springer and Heinrich Kramer, write Malleus maleficarum (The Witch Hammer) focusing on their pursuit of women who were practicing witchcraft
ca. 1315
1317 1322
1421
1453 1486
gloSSAry
a medical chemical science and speculative philosophy aiming to achieve the transmutation of the base metals into gold, the discovery of a universal cure for disease, and the discovery of a means of indefinitely prolonging life amulet a charm (as an ornament) often inscribed with a magic incantation or symbol to aid the wearer or protect against evil (as disease or witchcraft) anatomy the act of separating the parts of the organism in order to ascertain their position, relations, structure, and function anesthetic a substance that produces anesthesia; something that brings relief apothecary one who prepares and sells drugs or compounds for medicinal purposes aqueduct a conduit for water; especially one for carrying a large quantity of flowing water artery any of the tubular branching muscular- and elastic-walled vessels that carry blood from the heart through the body astrology the divination of the supposed influences of the stars and planets on human affairs and terrestrial events by their positions and aspects bile either of two humors associated in old physiology with irascibility and melancholy; a yellow or greenish viscid alkaline fluid secreted by the liver and passed into the duodenum where it aids especially in the emulsification and absorption of fats bloodletting phlebotomythe letting of blood for transfusion, diagnosis, or experiment, and especially formerly in the treatment of disease bubonic plague plague caused by a bacterium (Yersinia pestis) and characterized especially by the formation of buboes caliphs a successor of Muhammad as temporal and spiritual head of Islamused as a title cataract a clouding of the lens of the eye or of the surrounding transparent membrane, obstructing the passage of light
alchemy
10
glossary
cautery
11
the act or effect of cauterizing; an agent (as a hot iron or caustic) used to burn, sear, or destroy tissue cesspit a pit for the disposal of refuse (as sewage) contagion a contagious disease; the transmission of a disease by direct or indirect contact crusades any of the military expeditions undertaken by Christian powers in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries to win the Holy Land from the Muslims cupping an operation of drawing blood to the surface of the body by use of a glass vessel evacuated by heat diagnosis the art or act of identifying a disease from its signs and symptoms dissect to separate into pieces: expose the several parts of (as an animal) for scientific examination dysentery a disease characterized by severe diarrhea with passage of mucus and blood and usually caused by infection empirics charlatan; one who relies on practical experience endemic belonging or native to a particular people or country epidemic affecting or tending to affect a disproportionately large number of individuals within a population, community, or region at the same time fast to abstain from food; to eat sparingly or abstain from some foods folk medicine traditional medicine as practiced nonprofessionally, especially by people isolated from modern medical services and usually involving the use of plant-derived remedies on an empirical basis gaul a part of what is now France guilds an association of people with similar interests or pursuits, especially a medieval association of merchants and craftsmen gynecology a branch of medicine that deals with the diseases and routine physical care of the reproductive system of women hernia a protrusion of an organ or part (as the intestine) through connective tissue or through a wall of the cavity (as of the abdomen) in which it is normally enclosed hospital a charitable institution for the needy, aged, infi rm, or young; an institution where the sick or injured are given medical or surgical care
the four fluids entering into the constitution of the body and determining by their relative proportions a persons health and temperament incantation a use of spells or verbal charms spoken or sung as a part of a ritual of magic; also: a written or recited formula of words designed to produce a particular effect infirmary a place where the infirm or sick are lodged for care and treatment inflammation a local response to cellular injury that is marked by capillary dilatation, leukocytic infiltration, redness, heat, and pain and that serves as a mechanism initiating the elimination of noxious agents and of damaged tissue kidney stone a calculus (as of calcium salts) in the kidney leeches any of numerous carnivorous or bloodsucking, usually freshwater, annelid worms (genus Hirundinea) that have typically a flattened lanceolate segmented body with a sucker at each end leprosy a chronic infectious disease caused by a mycobacterium (Mycobacterium leprae) affecting especially the skin and peripheral nerves and characterized by the formation of nodules or macules that enlarge and spread accompanied by loss of sensation with eventual paralysis, wasting of muscle, and production of deformitiescalled also Hansens disease liver a large very vascular glandular organ of vertebrates that secretes bile and causes important changes in many of the substances contained in the blood (as by converting sugars into glycogen which it stores up until required and by forming urea) mandrake a Mediterranean herb (Mandragora officinarum) of the nightshade family with large ovate leaves, greenish-yellow or purple flowers, and a large usually forked root resembling a human in form and formerly credited with magical properties measles an acute contagious disease that is caused by a morbilivirus (species Measles virus) and is marked especially by an eruption of distinct red circular spotscalled also rubeola miasma a vaporous exhalation formerly believed to cause disease; also: a heavy vaporous emanation or atmosphere (a ~ of tobacco smoke)
Glossary 143
microbe microorganism, germ midwife a person who assists women in childbirth opium a bitter brownish addictive narcotic drug that consists of the
dried latex obtained from immature seed capsules of the opium poppy pandemic occurring over a wide geographic area and affecting an exceptionally high proportion of the population (~ malaria) pharmacy the art, practice, or profession of preparing, preserving, compounding, and dispensing medical drugs philosophy a discipline comprised of logic, aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology phlegm the one of the four humors in early physiology that was considered to be cold and moist and to cause sluggishness physician a person skilled in the art of healing; specifically one educated, clinically experienced, and licensed to practice medicine, as usually distinguished from surgery pilgrimage a journey of a pilgrim, especially to a shrine or a sacred place plague an epidemic disease causing a high rate of mortality pores a minute opening especially in an animal or plant: specifically one by which matter passes through a membrane psoriasis a chronic skin disease characterized by circumscribed red patches covered with white scales pulse a regular expansion of an artery caused by the ejection of blood into the arterial system by contractions of the heart pustule a small circumscribed elevation of the skin containing pus and having an inflamed base quarantine a restraint upon the activities or communication of persons or the transport of goods designed to prevent the spread of disease or pests septicemic characteristic of a systemic disease caused by pathogenic organisms or their toxins in the bloodstream; blood poisoning smallpox an acute contagious febrile disease of humans that is caused by a poxvirus (species Variola virus of the genus Orthopoxvirus) styptic tending to contract or bind: astringent; especially tending to check bleeding
further reSourceS
About Science And hiStory
Diamond, Jared. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1999. Diamond places the development of human society in context, which is vital to understanding the development of medicine. Hazen, Robert M., and James Trefi l. Science Matters: Achieving Scientific Literacy. New York: Doubleday, 1991. A clear and readable overview of scientific principles and how they apply in todays world, including the world of medicine. Internet History of Science Sourcebook. Available online. URL: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/science/sciencsbook.html. Accessed July 9, 2008. A rich resource of links related to every era of science history, broken down by disciplines, and exploring philosophical and ethical issues relevant to science and science history. Lindberg, David C. The Beginnings of Western Science, Second Edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007. A helpful explanation of the beginning of science and scientific thought. Though the emphasis is on science in general, there is a chapter on Greek and Roman medicine as well as medicine in medieval times. Roberts, J. M. A Short History of the World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993. This helps place medical developments in context with world events. Silver, Brian L. The Ascent of Science. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. A sweeping overview of the history of science from the Renaissance to the present. Spangenburg, Ray, and Diane Kit Moser. The Birth of Science: Ancient Times to 1699. New York: Facts On File, 2004. A highly readable book with key chapters on some of the most significant developments in medicine.
15
other reSourceS
Annenberg Media Learner.org. Interactives. Available online. URL: http://www.learner.org/interactives/middleages/morhealt.html. Accessed October 31, 2008. Information on medieval medicine with links to other medieval sites. Newman, Paul B. Daily Life in the Middle Ages. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2001. This is a wonderfully thorough book about life in the middle ages, and it describes everything from what people ate to how they fought during medieval times. Sacks, Oliver. Migraine. New York: Vintage Press, 1999. A helpful book about understanding migraine headaches that happens to refer to Hildegards experiences.
index
Note: Page numbers in italic refer to illustrations; m indicates a map; t indicates a table. Arnold of Villanova 29 The Articella 24 astrology four humors 3, 1416, 15, 36 and health 7 and mental illness 51 and treatments 41, 61 62 autopsies 57 Avicenna. See Ibn Sina (Avicenna) al-ayn (evil eye) 119
A
abbey gardens 1314, 43 Abu al-Qasim (Abulcasis) 55, 128129 agriculture 1011 albarellos 132133 Albertus Magnus, Saint 28 alchemy 16 allergies 122 ambergris 42 amputations 60 amulets 48, 119 anesthetics 5859 animal parts (medicines) 4142 Ann of York 74 Apollonia, Saint 45, 47 apothecaries 2628 aqueducts 86, 88 Aquinas. See Thomas Aquinas, Saint arbors 14 Aristotle 16, 28
B
Bacon, Roger 2829 bacteria 7 Baghdad hospitals 131 ballista 68, 68 barber-surgeons battlefield wounds 65 66 bloodletting 6162 duties of 1819 itinerant 5354, 55 training 5457 bathing customs 9397 baths (treatment) 9
1
C
caliphs 119 Canon of Medicine (Ibn Sina, Avicenna) 16, 26, 27, 125, 126, 127 Canon of the Mass 47 castles and estates bathing 97 court physicians 25 gardens of 1114, 12, 4344 sanitation systems 9091 toilets 93 water supplies 89 women as nurses and wise women 73 cataracts 60 Catherine of Sienna 20 Cato 11 cautery 8, 6365, 128129
Index 151
cesspits 91 charms and relics 9, 4748 childbirth 6, 75, 7778, 78 China bubonic plague 104, 105 smallpox vaccination 113 Chirugia magna (Guy de Chauliac) 68, 68 cinchona bark (quinine) 40 circulatory system 56, 127, 127130, 130 cleanliness and hygiene 9597 Clement IV (pope) 28 clerical healers 18, 2123 clothing and disease 95 colic 40 Collge de St. Cme (France) 67 Columella 11 compound remedies 9 Comprehensive Book of Medicine (al- Razi) 121, 122 conception, theories on 76 Constantinople hospital 131 Constantinus Africanus 26 27, 134 contagion 2, 114 Cosmas, Saint 22, 46 couching for cataract 60 Council of Clermont 23 Crusades 16, 29, 30, 114 cupping 8, 63, 63 cutting for stone 60, 65
D
Damian, Saint 22, 46 De agricultura (Cato) 11 demons and witches 7, 8, 84 dental hygiene 49, 50, 55 dentistry 4950, 55 depression 51 De re rustica (Varro) 11 diagnosis 3539 diet and nutrition 9, 11, 41, 49 dill 40 Dioscorides 11, 120, 132 diseases, common 6 disease transmission 610 dissections 56 drugs 131132 dyers borders 13
E
Ebers Papyrus 113 effigies 48 empirics. See folk healers (empirics) endemic illnesses 102 England bathing 97 bubonic plague (Black Death) 111112 hospitals 31, 32 London sanitation systems 9192 women physicians 75
F
False Gerber 29 fistula repair 68 flow of pollutants 98 folk healers (empirics) 18, 1921, 4849 food safety 99 food values/food qualities 41 four humors 25, 3, 1516, 4041, 49, 51 France Collge de St. Cme 67 health laws 98 Htel-Dieu (Paris) 30, 31, 32 midwives 79 Paris bathhouses 94 women practicing medicine 8384 fumigations 9, 45
H
hand washing 95 Hansen, Gerhard 116 healers 1829 apothecaries 2628 barber-surgeons. See barber-surgeons and bubonic plague (Black Death) 109 clerical leaders 18, 2123 folk healers (empirics) 18, 1921, 4849 physicians. See physicians women. See women practitioners health and safety laws 97100 health status 6, 11 heart function 56 hemorrhoids 59
G
Galen xiii, 4, 5, 5, 27, 42, 120 garbage 9899 gardens and gardening 1014, 12, 4344
Index 153
hemp 40 Henry III (king of England) 25 herbs 3940 hernias 59 Hildegard of Bingen 72, 74, 7982, 81, 94, 96 Hippocrates xiii, 120 homes, private water supplies 90 honey 119 hospital gardens 44 hospitals 2934, 32, 33, 115, 130131 Htel-Dieu (Paris) 30, 31, 32 Hunayn ibn Ishaq 120 hospitals 130131 Ibn Sina (Avicenna) 123 127 medical advances 127130 Muhammad and 117, 119 pharmacies 131133 physician training 133 134 protection and translation of Greek and Roman medical texts 1617, 2627 al-Razi 121, 121123 Ismail ibn Muhammad alHusayn al-Jurjani 62 Italy bubonic plague (Black Death) 109 hand washing 96 health laws 97 hospitals 31, 33 medici condotti 100 physicians 25 sanitation systems 92
I
Ibn an-Nafis 127130 Ibn Battuta 108 Ibn Sina (Avicenna) 16, 26, 27, 123127 incantations 16, 4849 India and Greek thinking 120 leprosy 113114 smallpox vaccination 113 infirmary/hospital gardens 44 iron deficiency 6 Islamic Empire 124m Islamic medicine (Yunani medicine) 117135 Baghdad and Cairo 120 Greek science and 119121
J
Jacobus, John 107 Jews 2324, 106107 jinni (evil spirits) 119 John I (duke of Burgundy) 109 John II (Byzantine emperor) 131 John of Arderne 6869
K
Kempe, Margery 72, 8283 kidney stones 60 Knights Hospitaller (Knights of Malta) 29 knot gardens 14 Kramer, Heinrich 84 Kymer, Gilbert 75
M
magic 4849 malaria 40 Malleus maleficarum (The Witch Hammer) 84 mandrake plant 40 measles 122123 medical beliefs 117 common diseases 6 disease transmission 610 four humors 25, 3, 4041 function of blood 56 religion and 1014, 12 medici condotti 25, 100 medicines administration of 42, 45 herbs and vegetable-based ingredients 11, 13, 39 41, 8182 nonvegetable ingredients 4142 trial and error 39 types of 89 menstrual periods 76 mental illnesses 51 Meyerhof, Max 127 miasma 7, 8
L
Lanfranc of Milan (Guido Lanfranchi) 67 latrines 91, 92 Laurentius de Voltolina 132 lawns 14 laws, health and safety 97 100, 115 Lazar houses 33 lead 87 leech books 115 leeches 51, 62, 129 Leeuwenhoek, Antoni van 7 leprosy (lepers) 7, 3334, 102, 113116, 114 lice and nit removal 98 life expectancy 6
Index 155
microbes 7 midwives 7879 migraines 80 monasteries (abbeys) bathing 9697 care of the sick 2123 gardens 1314, 43 hospitals 2930 sanitation systems 9091 toilets 92 water supplies 8889 women as nurses 73 Mondeville, Henri de 67 mouth pain and toothaches 42, 47, 4950 Muhammad 117, 119
P
palaces. See castles and estates Palladius 11 pandemics 102 Pantokrator Hospital (Constantinople) 131 peasant gardens 43 Peter of Spain 77 Petrarch 112 pharmacies 131133 phlebotomy. See bloodletting (phlebotomy, venesection) phlegm (four humors) 3, 3, 40 physicians and bubonic plague (Black Death) 109 employed by cities 99100 Islamic medicine 133134 patron saints of 47 and surgery 53, 56, 57 university training 19, 2327 pilgrimages 4748 placebo effect 45 plague. See bubonic plague (Black Death); plague of Justinian The Plague (Bcklin) 103 plague of Justinian 101, 102 104 Pliny the Elder 11 pneuma (life spirit) 56 poppy plant (opium) 40 Porter, Roy 75
N
nasal polyps 59 necessary rooms 9293 nervous system 6 Newman, Paul B. 85 nosegay gardens 14 nutrition. See diet and nutrition
O
observation 36 On Hosbondrie (Palladius) 11 On Surgery and Surgical Instruments (Abu al-Qasim) 128129 opium (poppy plant) 40
S Q
quarantines 78, 109 quinine (cinchona bark) 40 Sacks, Oliver 80 St. Bartholomews hospital (England) 31 saints 22, 2223 St. Thomass hospital (England) 31 sanitation systems 9093 Santa Maria Nuova (Italy) 31 scientists 2829 The Secrets of Women 76 shrines 4748 simples 9 skull fractures 5960, 66 smallpox 102, 112113, 122 123 soap 95
R
al-Razi 113, 121, 121123 relics and charms 9, 4748 religion and medicine bubonic plague (Black Death) 106108 clerical healers 18, 2123 healing through prayer and divination 45 Islam xiiixiv, 10, 118119
Index 157
Soranus of Ephesus 75, 77 spices 41 Sprenger, Jacob 84 steam bathing 94 sterile environment 5758 styptics 55 surgery 5370 Abu al-Qasim (Abulcasis) 128129 barber-surgeons 9, 1819, 5357 battlefield wounds 64, 6567, 68 bloodletting (phlebotomy, venesection) 6163, 62 cautery 6365 cupping 63, 63 patron saints of 47 prominent surgeons 6769 status of 53 survival rates 6061 tools and operating conditions 57, 58, 129 types of 5961, 60 tourniquets 66 towns health and safety laws 97100 sanitation systems 9192 water supplies 8990 traveling surgeons 5354, 55 The Treasury of the Poor (Peter of Spain) 77 treatments and cures 89, 45, 4751. See also medicines Trotula 76 Trotula of Salerno 7273, 75, 77 Tulp, Nicolaes 69 tumors 60
U
universities 2327, 70, 72 upper class. See castles and estates urine collection for wool processing 92 uroscopy 3637, 37
T
Tatawi, Muhyi ad-Din at- 127 theriac 42 Thomas Aquinas, Saint 24, 28 toilets 9293 toothaches. See mouth pain and toothaches
V
vaccinations 113 Varro 11 venesection. See bloodletting (phlebotomy, venesection) vermifuges 89 Virgin Mary 45
Y
yellow bile (four humors) 3, 34 Yersinia pestis 101, 102 Yunani medicine. See Islamic medicine
Z
zodiac man 15, 1516 zodiac signs 15, 1516, 36, 38, 6162 zoning laws 98