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Outlines of Greek and Roman Medicine - James Sir Elliott
Sir James Elliott
Outlines of Greek and Roman Medicine
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066119904
Table of Contents
PREFACE.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
OUTLINES OF Greek and Roman Medicine
CHAPTER I.
EARLY ROMAN MEDICINE.
CHAPTER II.
EARLY GREEK MEDICINE.
CHAPTER III.
HIPPOCRATES.
CHAPTER IV.
PLATO, ARISTOTLE, THE SCHOOL OF ALEXANDRIA AND EMPIRICISM.
CHAPTER V.
ROMAN MEDICINE AT THE END OF THE REPUBLIC AND THE BEGINNING OF THE EMPIRE.
CHAPTER VI.
IN THE REIGN OF THE CÆSARS—TO THE DEATH OF NERO.
CHAPTER VII.
PHYSICIANS FROM THE TIME OF AUGUSTUS TO THE DEATH OF NERO.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE FIRST AND SECOND CENTURIES OF THE CHRISTIAN ERA.
CHAPTER IX.
GALEN.
CHAPTER X.
THE LATER ROMAN AND BYZANTINE PERIOD.
CHAPTER XI.
INFLUENCE OF CHRISTIANITY ON ALTRUISM AND THE HEALING ART.
CHAPTER XII.
GYMNASIA AND BATHS.
CHAPTER XIII.
SANITATION.
APPENDIX.
FEES IN ANCIENT TIMES.
INDEX.
PREFACE.
Table of Contents
I was stimulated to write these Outlines of Greek and Roman Medicine by a recent sojourn in the south-eastern part of Europe. The name of the book defines, to some extent, its limitations, for my desire has been to give merely a general outline of the most important stages in the advancement of the healing art in the two Empires to which modern civilization is most deeply indebted. There are a few great works on the history of medicine by continental writers, such, for instance, as those by the German writers, Baas, Sprengel, and Puschmann, but, generally speaking, the subject has been much neglected.
I cherish the hope that this little work may appeal to doctors, to medical students, and to those of the public who are interested in a narration of the progress of knowledge, and who realize that the investigation of the body in health and disease has been one of the most important features of human endeavour.
The medical profession deserves censure for neglect of its own history, and pity 'tis that so many practitioners know nothing of the story of their art. For this reason many reputed discoveries are only re-discoveries; as Bacon wrote: Medicine is a science which hath been, as we have said, more professed than laboured, and yet more laboured than advanced; the labour having been, in my judgment, rather in circle than in progression. For I find much iteration, and small progression.
Of late years, however, the History of Medicine has been coming into its kingdom. Universities are establishing courses of lectures on the subject, and the Royal Society of Medicine recently instituted a historical section.
The material I have used in this book has been gathered from many sources, and, as far as possible, references have been given, but I have sought for, and taken, information wherever it could best be found. As Montaigne wrote: I have here only made a nosegay of culled flowers, and have brought nothing of my own but the thread that ties them together.
I have to express my indebtedness to my friend, Mr. J. Scott Riddell, M.V.O., M.A., M.B., C.M., Senior Surgeon, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, for his great kindness in reading the proof-sheets, preparing the index and seeing this book through the press and so removing one of the difficulties which an author writing overseas has to encounter; also to my publishers for their courtesy and attention.
James Sands Elliott.
Wellington,
New Zealand.
January 5, 1914.
Page
PREFACE.vii
CONTENTS.ix
ILLUSTRATIONS.xii
CHAPTER I.
Early Roman Medicine.
1
Origin of Healing
Temples
Lectisternium
Temple of Æsculapius
Archagathus
Domestic Medicine
Greek Doctors
Cloaca Maxima
Aqueducts
State of the early Empire
CHAPTER II.
Early Greek Medicine.
13
Apollo
Æsculapius
Temples
Serpents
Gods of Health
Melampus
Homer
Machaon
Podalarius
Temples of Æsculapius
Methods of Treatment
Gymnasia
Classification of Renouard
Pythagoras
Democedes
Greek Philosophers
CHAPTER III.
Hippocrates.
25
His life and works
His influence on Medicine
CHAPTER IV.
Plato, Aristotle, the School of Alexandria, and Empiricism.
39
Plato
Aristotle
Alexandrian School
Its Origin
Its Influence
Lithotomy
Herophilus
Erasistratus
Cleombrotus
Chrysippos
Anatomy
Empiricism
Serapion of Alexandria
CHAPTER V.
Roman Medicine at the end of the Republic and the Beginning of the Empire.
51
Asclepiades of Prusa
Themison of Laodicea
Methodism
Wounds of Julius Cæsar
Systems of Philosophy
State of the country
Roman quacks
Slaves and Freedmen
Lucius Horatillavus
CHAPTER VI.
In the Reign of the Cæsars to the Death of Nero.
63
Augustus
His illnesses
Antonius Musa
Mæcenas
Tiberius
Caligula
Claudius
Nero
Seneca
Astrology
Archiater
Women poisoners
Oculists in Rome
CHAPTER VII.
Physicians from the Time of Augustus to the Death of Nero.
72
Celsus
His life and works
His influence on Medicine
Meges of Sidon
Apollonius of Tyana
Alleged miracles
Vettius Valleus
Scribonius Longus
Andromachus
Thessalus of Tralles
Pliny
CHAPTER VIII.
The First and Second Centuries of the Christian Era.
86
Athenæus
Pneumatism
Eclectics
Agathinus
Aretæus
Archigenes
Dioscorides
Cassius Felix
Pestilence in Rome
Ancient surgical instruments
Herodotus
Heliodorus
Cælius Aurelianus
Soranus
Rufus of Ephesus
Marinus
Quintus
CHAPTER IX.
Galen.
96
His life and works
His influence on Medicine
CHAPTER X.
The Later Roman and Byzantine Period.
111
Beginning of Decline
Neoplatonism
Antyllus
Oribasius
Magnus
Jacobus Psychristus
Adamantius
Meletius
Nemesius
Ætius
Alexander of Tralles
The Plague
Moschion
Paulus Ægineta
Decline of Healing Art
CHAPTER XI.
Influence of Christianity on Altruism and the Healing Art.
127
Essenes
Cabalists and Gnostics
Object of Christ's Mission
Stoics
Constantine and Justinian
Gladiatorial Games
Orphanages
Support of the Poor
Hospitals
Their Foundation
Christianity and Hospitals
Fabiola
Christian Philanthropy
Demon Theories of Disease receive the Church's Sanction
Monastic Medicine
Miracles of Healing
St. Paul
St. Luke
Proclus
Practice of Anatomy denounced
Christianity the prime factor in promoting Altruism
CHAPTER XII.
Gymnasia and Baths.
143
Gymnastics
Vitruvius
Opinions of Ancient Physicians on Gymnastics
The Athletes
The Baths
Description of Baths at Pompeii
Thermæ
Baths of Caracalla
CHAPTER XIII.
Sanitation.
155
Water-supply
Its extent
The Aqueducts
Distribution in city
Drainage
Disposal of the Dead
Cremation and Burial
Catacombs
Public Health Regulations
APPENDIX.
Fees in Ancient Times
162
INDEX.163
ILLUSTRATIONS.
Table of Contents
Asklepios, the ancient Greek Deity of Healingfrontispiece
Machaon (Son of Asklepios), the first Greek Military Surgeon, attending to the wounded Menelausp. 17
Plate I.
—Bust of Æsculapiusface p. 13
Plate II.
—Hygeia, the Greek Deity of Healthface p. 15
Plate III.
—Facade of Temple of Asklepios, restored (Delfrasse)face p. 18
Plate IV.
—Health Temple, restored (Caton)face p. 20
OUTLINES OF
Greek and Roman Medicine
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I.
Table of Contents
EARLY ROMAN MEDICINE.
Table of Contents
Origin of Healing—Temples—Lectisternium—Temple of Æsculapius—Archagathus—Domestic Medicine—Greek Doctors—Cloaca Maxima—Aqueducts—State of the early Empire.
The origin of the healing art in Ancient Rome is shrouded in uncertainty. The earliest practice of medicine was undoubtedly theurgic, and common to all primitive peoples. The offices of priest and of medicine-man were combined in one person, and magic was invoked to take the place of knowledge. There is much scope for the exercise of the imagination in attempting to follow the course of early man in his efforts to bring plants into medicinal use. That some of the indigenous plants had therapeutic properties was often an accidental discovery, leading in the next place to experiment and observation. Cornelius Agrippa, in his book on occult philosophy, states that mankind has learned the use of many remedies from animals. It has even been suggested that the use of the enema was discovered by observing a long-beaked bird drawing up water into its beak, and injecting the water into the bowel. The practice of healing, crude and imperfect, progressed slowly in ancient times and was conducted in much the same way in Rome, and among the Egyptians, the Jews, the Chaldeans, Hindus and Parsees, and the Chinese and Tartars.
The Etruscans had considerable proficiency in philosophy and medicine, and to this people, as well as to the Sabines, the Ancient Romans were indebted for knowledge. Numa Pompilius, of Sabine origin, who was King of Rome 715
B.C.
, studied physical science, and, as Livy relates, was struck by lightning and killed as the result of his experiments, and it has therefore been inferred that these experiments related to the investigation of electricity. It is surprising to find in the Twelve Tables of Numa references to dental operations. In early times, it is certain that the Romans were more prone to learn the superstitions of other peoples than to acquire much useful knowledge. They were cosmopolitan in medical art as in religion. They had acquaintance with the domestic medicine known to all savages, a little rude surgery, and prescriptions from the Sibylline books, and had much recourse to magic. It was to Greece that the Romans first owed their knowledge of healing, and of art and science generally, but at no time did the Romans equal the Greeks in mental culture.
Pliny states that the Roman people for more than six hundred years were not, indeed, without medicine, but they were without physicians.
They used traditional family recipes, and had numerous gods and goddesses of disease and healing. Febris was the god of fever, Mephitis the god of stench; Fessonia aided the weary, and Sweet Cloacina
presided over the drains. The plague-stricken appealed to the goddess Angeronia, women to Fluonia and Uterina. Ossipaga took care of the bones of children, and Carna was the deity presiding over the abdominal organs.
Temples were erected in Rome in 467
B.C.
in honour of Apollo, the reputed father of Æsculapius, and in 460
B.C.
in honour of Æsculapius of Epidaurus. Ten years later a pestilence raged in the city, and a temple was built in honour of the Goddess Salus. By order of the Sibylline books, in 399
B.C.
, the first lectisternium was held in Rome to combat a pestilence. This was a festival of Greek origin. It was a time of prayer and sacrifice; the images of the gods were laid upon a couch, and a meal was spread on a table before them. These festivals were repeated as occasion demanded, and the device of driving a nail into the temple of Jupiter to ward off the pestilence that walketh in darkness,
and destruction that wasteth at noonday
was begun 360
B.C.
As evidence of the want of proper surgical knowledge, the fact is recorded by Livy that after the Battle of Sutrium (309
B.C.
) more soldiers died of wounds than were killed in action. The worship of Æsculapius was begun by the Romans 291
B.C.
, and the Egyptian Isis and Serapis were also invoked for their healing powers.
At the time of the great plague in Rome (291
B.C.
), ambassadors were sent to Epidaurus, in accordance with the advice of the Sibylline books, to seek aid from Æsculapius. They returned with a statue of the god, but as their boat passed up the Tiber a serpent which had lain concealed during the voyage glided from the boat, and landing on the bank was welcomed by the people in the belief that the god himself had come to their aid. The Temple of Æsculapius, which was built after this plague in 291
B.C.
, was situated on the island of the Tiber. Tradition states that, when the Tarquins were expelled, their crops were thrown into the river, and soil accumulated thereon until ultimately the island was formed. In consequence of