Description

Book Synopsis

Medicine and Healing Practices in Ancient Egypt provides a new perspective on healthcare and healing treatments in Egypt from the Predynastic to the Roman periods. Rather than concentrating exclusively on diseases and medical conditions as evidenced in ancient sources, it provides a ‘people-focused’ perspective, asking what it was like to be ill or disabled in this society? Who were the healers? To what extent did disease occurrence and treatment reflect individual social status?

As well as geographical, environmental and dietary factors, which undoubtedly affected general health, some groups were prone to specific hazards. These are discussed in detail, including soldiers’ experience of trauma, wounds and exposure to epidemics; and conditions - blindness, sand pneumoconiosis, trauma and limb amputations – resulting from working conditions at building and other sites.

Methods of diagnosis and treatment were derived from special concepts about disease and medical ethics. These are explored, as well as the individual contributions and professional interactions of various groups of healers and carers. Medical training and practice occurred in various locations, including temples and battlefields; these are described, as well as the treatments and equipment that were available.

Ancient writers generally praised the Egyptian healers’ knowledge, expertise, and professional relationship with their patients. A brief comparison is drawn between this approach and those prevailing elsewhere in Mesopotamia, Greece and Rome. Finally, Egypt’s legacy, transmitted through Greek, Roman and Arabic sources, is confirmed as the source of some principles and practices still found in modern ‘Western’ medicine.

Combining information from the latest studies on human remains and the authors’ biomedical research, this book brings the subject up to date, enabling a wide readership to access often scattered information in a fascinating synthesis.



Table of Contents

Abbreviations
Chronology

  1. Introduction to Egyptian concepts of disease and medical ethics

  2. Providers of healthcare: The healer’s perspective

  3. The temple as a location for medical training and practice

  4. Medical treatment and healing in a community context

  5. Methods of treatment

  6. Recipients of healthcare: The patient’s perspective

  7. Egypt’s contribution to other ancient and modern medical systems

  8. Bibliography

Medicine and Healing Practices in Ancient Egypt

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    A Hardback by Rosalie David, Roger Forshaw

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      View other formats and editions of Medicine and Healing Practices in Ancient Egypt by Rosalie David

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 12/12/2023
      ISBN13: 9781837644292, 978-1837644292
      ISBN10: 1837644292

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Medicine and Healing Practices in Ancient Egypt provides a new perspective on healthcare and healing treatments in Egypt from the Predynastic to the Roman periods. Rather than concentrating exclusively on diseases and medical conditions as evidenced in ancient sources, it provides a ‘people-focused’ perspective, asking what it was like to be ill or disabled in this society? Who were the healers? To what extent did disease occurrence and treatment reflect individual social status?

      As well as geographical, environmental and dietary factors, which undoubtedly affected general health, some groups were prone to specific hazards. These are discussed in detail, including soldiers’ experience of trauma, wounds and exposure to epidemics; and conditions - blindness, sand pneumoconiosis, trauma and limb amputations – resulting from working conditions at building and other sites.

      Methods of diagnosis and treatment were derived from special concepts about disease and medical ethics. These are explored, as well as the individual contributions and professional interactions of various groups of healers and carers. Medical training and practice occurred in various locations, including temples and battlefields; these are described, as well as the treatments and equipment that were available.

      Ancient writers generally praised the Egyptian healers’ knowledge, expertise, and professional relationship with their patients. A brief comparison is drawn between this approach and those prevailing elsewhere in Mesopotamia, Greece and Rome. Finally, Egypt’s legacy, transmitted through Greek, Roman and Arabic sources, is confirmed as the source of some principles and practices still found in modern ‘Western’ medicine.

      Combining information from the latest studies on human remains and the authors’ biomedical research, this book brings the subject up to date, enabling a wide readership to access often scattered information in a fascinating synthesis.



      Table of Contents

      Abbreviations
      Chronology

      1. Introduction to Egyptian concepts of disease and medical ethics

      2. Providers of healthcare: The healer’s perspective

      3. The temple as a location for medical training and practice

      4. Medical treatment and healing in a community context

      5. Methods of treatment

      6. Recipients of healthcare: The patient’s perspective

      7. Egypt’s contribution to other ancient and modern medical systems

      8. Bibliography

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