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The Middle Ages are often seen as a shadowy period of limited medical
knowledge and great superstition. But many ideas from the classical medicine of
the ancient Greeks and Romans survived into the medieval period relatively intact.
Medical knowledge also arrived in Europe from the Arab world over the centuries, and doctors were familiar with the medicinal properties of some plants. However, treatments and cures were often as much to do with magic and superstition as they were to do with real medicine.
Doctors were very much guided by astrology in the Middle Ages. The
Church, which influenced so much of medieval life, strongly disapproved of
astrology, but found it difficult to stamp out. During the worst period of the
Black Death, astrological charts became even more important for doctors. As the
illness reached a noticeable crisis point, after which a patient either recovered or
died, the time of recovery and the position of the stars and planets were seen as
very significant. Even Guy de Chauliac, physician to three popes in succession,
and author of the leading work on medieval surgery, was a firm believer in
astrology. For operations, he would use recognized anesthetic potions, but also
recommended bleeding and other procedures based on the position of the planets.
Illnesses were also determined to be serious or not depending on whether they
were under the sun’s or the moon’s influence.
As far as medicines were concerned, many medieval concoctions were little
more than witch’s brews. One of the best known medicinal drugs of the Middle
Ages was ‘treacle’ or theriac, a blend of sixty four different drugs in honey. Sold
as a cure all, it was claimed to cure fevers, prevent internal swellings, clear skin
blemishes, help heart trouble, dropsy, epilepsy, palsy, help you sleep, aid
digestion, strengthen limbs, heal wounds and of course, cure plague. Doctors at the
time did make use of herbal remedies too. However, here again astrology had a
distinct influence. The genuine medical properties of some plants were also related
to how, and by who, they were collected. Betony had to be picked by a small
child in August before sunrise, and marigold when the moon had entered the
house of Virgo. A herbalist also had to recite the proper designated prayers when
preparing the medicine.
And yet, medieval doctors were also skilled at a variety of medical
procedures. They could set broken bones, extract teeth, take out bladder stones,
remove cataracts, and restored a scarred face by skin grafts from the arm. They
knew that apoplexy and epilepsy were related to the brain. Urine samples, feces
and pulse rates were used to analyze ailments, and doctors were aware of which
substances were diuretics and laxatives. It was also firmly believed that prevention
was better than cure, and great emphasis was placed on a healthy lifestyle, in
which diet, exercise, mental attitude and reduced stress all played a part.
Surgery was practiced in the Middle Ages too, although it was seen as a
last resort. It is known to have been successful in the treatment of breast cancer,
gangrene, hemorrhoids, and other conditions. There are illustrations showing
medieval surgery, but naturally they give no sign of the pain suffered by the
person on the operating table.
Anesthetics were used, but many of the concoctions used to relieve pain or
induce sleep were also potentially fatal. ‘Dwale’, for example, consisted of gall
from a cow or castrated boar, lettuce, briony, opium, henbane and hemlock juice
mixed with wine. The opium, alcohol and hemlock would have made patient
incapable. Henbane and briony would have quickened the passage of poisons out
of the body. However, it must be noted that hemlock was particularly dangerous,
too much being a death sentence.
Despite their skills and knowledge, for diseases and ailments beyond their
abilities, doctors fell back on solutions which seem bizarre to the modern reader.
Ringworm was treated by washing the patient’s hair in a boy’s urine. Gout could
be relieved by a plaster of goat dung mixed with rosemary and honey. Blood
letting was also popular as a cure for just about everything, with many different
parts of the body used. For example, the two veins in the neck were to be
tapped for leprosy, while the basilic vein, just below the elbow was said to clear
the liver and spleen of any impurities.
If everything failed, charms, sacred relics and incantations were used to ease
the pain of childbirth, help contraception, cure toothache, remove boils, and even
mend broken arms and legs. Medical knowledge eventually improved, but not
straight away, and for centuries to come, doctors were still very much influenced
by superstition in the performance of their duties.
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