| Darrera modificació: 2024-03-15Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
 Black, Winston E. (ed.), Medicine and Healing in the Premodern West: A History in Documents, Londres, Broadview Press, 2019, 200 pp. 
ResumMedicine and Healing in the Premodern West traces the history of medicine and medical practice from Ancient Egypt through to the end of the Middle Ages. Featuring nearly one hundred primary documents and images, this book introduces readers to the words and ideas of men and women from across Europe and the Mediterranean Sea, from prominent physicians to humble healers. Each of the book's ten chronological and thematic chapters is given a significant historical introduction, in which each primary source is described in its original context. Many of the included source texts are newly translated by the editor, some of them appearing in English for the first time.
 Contents:
 Introduction
 Chronology
 Questions to Consider
 Documents
 -- Part 1. The Earliest Medical Writings of the Near East and Mediterranean (ca. 2000-700 BCE)
 1. The Kahun Gynaecological Papyrus
 2. Diagnosis in Ancient Egypt: The Ebers Papyrus
 3. A Babylonian Spell against Fever
 4. Plague as Divine Punishment in Homer's Iliad
 5. Gods as the Source of Disease: Hesiod, Works and Days
 6. Violence and Healing in Homeric Greece
 -- Part 2. Medicine and Healing among the Ancient Greeks (ca. 500 BCE – 200 CE)
 -- Rational Medicine in the Age of Hippocrates
 7. Hippocratic Corpus, Nature of Man
 8. Plato on the Nature of Disease: Timaeus
 9. Thucydides and the Plague of Athens, 430 BCE
 10. Hippocratic Corpus, Aphorisms
 11. Hippocratic Corpus, Airs, Waters, and Places
 12. Case Histories the Hippocratic Epidemics
 -- Asclepius, the God of Physicians
 13. The Hippocratic Oath
 14. Pindar: Apollo leaves Asclepius with Chiron the Centaur
 15. Celsus celebrates Asclepius as a Man
 16. A Greek anatomical votive plaque
 17. Aelius Aristides dreams of Asclepius
 18. An Egyptian God in Greek Dress in a Hellenistic Papyrus
 -- Part 3. Professional Medicine in the Roman Mediterranean (ca. 1-300 CE)
 19. Galen, On the Medical Sects
 20. Aretaeus the Cappadocian on the Difficult Case of Tetanus
 21. Rufus of Ephesus, Medical Questions: Interrogation of the Patient
 22. Celsus: A Healthy Regimen without Doctors
 23. Dioscorides and the Science of Pharmacology
 24. Galen, the Boastful Practitioner: On the Affected Places
 25. Galen, On Black Bile: Praising and Rewriting Hippocrates
 26. Herodian on a plague in the Roman Empire
 -- Part 4. Practical Medicine for the Roman Family and Home (ca. 100-500 CE)
 27. Varro, De re rustica: An early germ theory?
 28. Vegetius, De re militari: Preserving the Health of Imperial Troops
 29. The Legend of Agnodike, a Greek midwife and physician
 30. Soranus of Ephesus: Instructions for Midwives
 31. Cato the Elder's Roman remedies: Cabbage, Wine, and Magic
 32. Pliny the Elder's homespun medicine: Remedies derived from Wool
 33. Popular medicine in verse: Liber medicinalis
 -- Part 5. Distilling Classical Medicine in Late Antiquity (ca. 300-700 CE)
 34. Oribasius: A Galenic Diet in the Later Roman Empire
 35. Anthimus to King Theoderic, On the Observance of Diet
 36. A Medieval Primer in Ancient Medicine by St. Isidore of Seville
 37. Medicine of Pliny for the Informed Traveler
 38. The Herbarius of Apuleius Platonicus
 39. Marcellus and His Empirical Handbook of Medicines
 40. The Drug Theory of Paul of Aegina
 -- Part 6. Medical Diversity in the Early Middle Ages (ca. 600-1000 CE)
 -- Monotheism and Medicine
 41. The Oath of Asaph, a Jewish Physician's Oath
 42. A Christianized Hippocratic Oath
 43. Medicine and Diet in the Rule of St. Benedict
 44. Roman Doctors as Christian Saints: Cosmas and Damian
 45. Islamic Medicine of the Prophet: Sunan Abu Duwud
 -- Early Medieval Responses to Plague and Pestilence
 46. Evagrius Scholasticus on the Plague of Justinian
 47. Gregory of Tours on Epidemic Disease and the Sickness of Kings
 48. A Votive Mass against Pestilence
 -- Old English Medicine: Superstition or Empiricism?
 49. The Nine Herbs Charm, from the Old English Lacnunga
 50. Bald's Leechbook: Herbal remedies for eye problems
 51. Medical Prognostics in Anglo-Saxon England
 -- Part 7. The Arabic Tradition of Learned Medicine (ca. 900-1400 CE)
 52. An Introduction to Rational Medicine: Hunayn ibn Ishaq's Isagoge
 53. Avicenna, The Canon of Medicine
 54. Avicenna on Prognosis through Urine
 55. Maimonides and Galen on the Meaning of the Pulse
 56. Al-Razi, Case Studies in the Spirit of Hippocrates
 57. Usamah ibn Munqidh: A Muslim view of Frankish Medicine
 58. Al-Razi on Diagnosis and Treatment for Smallpox and Measles
 59. Pilgrim Medicine: Qust? ibn L?q? on "The Little Dragon of Medina"
 60. Ancient Greeks in Later Medieval Prophetic Medicine: al-Tibb al-nabawi
 -- Part 8. Learned Medicine in High Medieval Europe (ca.1000-1400 CE)
 -- Humours, Complexion, and Uroscopy
 61. A Clever Duke and a Cleverer Physician in the Tenth Century
 62. Constantine the African, Pantegni: Understanding Complexion
 63. Humoural Medicine in Verse: The Salernitan Regimen of Health
 64. A Medieval Urine Wheel
 65. Constantine the African with a Urine Glass
 -- Explaining Diseases
 66. Diagnosing Lovesickness: Constantine the African's Medicalized Emotions
 67. Platearius on Leprosy in Theory and Practice
 68. Guy de Chauliac's personal experience with the Black Death
 -- Observation and Authority
 69. Trota of Salerno as a Medical Master
 70. Medical Education in High Medieval Europe (Three Accounts)
 71. Licenses for Male and Female Surgeons in Medieval Naples
 72. A Woman Physician on Trial in Medieval Paris, 1322
 -- Part 9. Medical Practice in the High Middle Ages (ca.1000-1400 CE)
 -- Herbalism and Pharmacology
 73. Macer Floridus, On the Virtues of Herbs
 74. Henry of Huntingdon, Herbalism in The English Garden
 75. Matthaeus Platearius: Rationalizing Simple and Compound Medicines
 -- Arabic and Latin Surgery
 76. Learned Surgery: Albucasis on the Treatment of Cataracts
 77. Applying Medical Theory to Wound Treatment: Guy de Chauliac
 78. Training and Decorum for the Learned Surgeon
 -- Medieval Obstetrics and Gynecology
 79. Copho: Anatomy of the uterus, learned from a pig
 80. A Brief Guide to Uroscopy of Women
 81. Contraceptives in the Canon of Avicenna
 82. St. Hildegard of Bingen: A Moralized Explanation of Menstruation
 83. Trotula: Treating Retention of the Period in Medieval Italy
 84. A Medieval Hebrew Treatise on Difficult Births
 -- Part 10. Medicine and the Supernatural: Competitors or Partners? (ca. 1000-1400 CE)
 85. A Doctor and a Saint in Early Salerno
 86. The Life of Saint Milburga: Physicians and Saints, Healing Together?
 87. Doctors and Miracles in the Canonization of Lady Delphine
 88. Medieval Jewish Magical Medicine
 89. Medieval Christian Healing Charms
 90. John Arderne, Astrological Instructions for the Surgeon
 91. Image: Astrological Bloodletting Man
MatèriesHistòria de la medicinaDocumentació
 Fonts
 Antologia
NotesInformació de l'editor  . |